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Novell's Reply Memorandum in Support of Motion to Dismiss - Annotated
Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 01:12 AM EST

Novell's legal arguments in their Reply Memorandum in Support of Motion to Dismiss are detailed and, to me, a good example of real legal work. They have done their research, they have considered the other side's strengths and weaknesses, and they've left no stone unturned. I thought it would therefore be worthwhile to break it down into components, with the references handy, so you can see how lawyers think and strategize. If I were actually working on the case, I'd naturally do a lot more research, but this is just an exercise to show you the process, as overview, not necessarily every last detail.

So with that disclaimer, here is the annotated version, my thoughts on what it all means. The Memorandum text is black, my notes are blue, indented, and quotations from other sources, such as laws, cases, or earlier pleadings, are in purple, double indented. I hope you enjoy it.

The other documents you will need to follow along, although I've quoted from them and provided links in the notes, are SCO's Complaint, Novell's original Memorandum in Support of Motion to Dismiss (as distinguished from this current Reply Memorandum in Support of Motion to Dismiss), and SCO's Memorandum in Opposition to Motion to Dismiss.

**********************************************

MORRISON & FOERSTER L.L.P.
Michael A. Jacobs (pro hac vice pending)
Matthew I. Kreeger (pro hac vice pending)
[address, phone, fax]

Paul Goldstein (pro hac vice pending)
[address, telephone]

ANDERSON & KARRENBERG
Thomas R. Karrenberg, #3726
John P. Mullen, #4097
Heather M. Sneddon, #9520
[address, phone, fax]

Attorneys for Defendant Novell, Inc.

_____________________________

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
DISTRICT OF UTAH, CENTRAL DIVISION

____________________________

THE SCO GROUP, INC., a Delaware
corporation,

Plaintiff,

vs.

NOVELL, INC., a Delaware corporation,

Defendant.

__________________________

REPLY MEMORANDUM IN
SUPPORT OF MOTION TO DISMISS

Case No. 2:04CV00139

Judge Dale A. Kimball

_________________________

INTRODUCTION

SCO's opposition to Novell's motion to dismiss concedes that its slander of title claim turns on whether the Asset Purchase Agreement (the "APA") assigned the copyrights from Novell. SCO also concedes that section 204(a) of the Copyright Act sets the applicable legal standard. The principal issue in this motion to dismiss, therefore, is whether the APA constitutes a written instrument of conveyance of the copyrights, as the statute requires.

Here Novell is drawing a line in the sand. This is what we agree on, they are saying, because SCO has conceded the following:

  • that SCO's entire case depends on whether or not the APA assigned them copyrights
  • that the legal standard is Section 204(a) of the Copyright Act
So the only question before you, your Honor, Novell is saying, is whether or not the APA is a sufficient written instrument of conveyance of the copyrights. If it isn't, SCO's whole slander of title case fails. Novell then proceeds to argue that it isn't sufficient.

Here is Section 204(a) of the Copyright Law:

"(a) A transfer of copyright ownership, other than by operation of law, is not valid unless an instrument of conveyance, or a note or memorandum of the transfer, is in writing and signed by the owner of the rights conveyed or such owner's duly authorized agent."

Case law over the years has refined that definition, as you will see in the cases Novell uses. SCO probably didn't intend to concede all of the above. It was actually Novell that brought Section 204(a) into the argument, in their Memorandum in Support of Motion to Dismiss. But in saying SCO has conceded these things, Novell is pointing out that SCO failed to argue against them when they responded to Novell's Motion to Dismiss. Instead of arguing that this isn't a copyright case (which later SCO did argue in its separate Motion to Remand) or that this isn't the pertinent legal standard, SCO in the Memorandum in Opposition argued that the APA plus Amendment 2 was enough to meet the Section 204(a) standard, without including that they didn't think it applied because this was a mere contractual claim or on some other grounds. Woops. Now, Novell is trying to hold them to it.

Here is what SCO wrote about Section 204(a) in their Memorandum in Opposition to Motion to Dismiss instead of arguing that it didn't apply:

"As support for its position, Novell claims that Section 204(a) imposes 'very strict requirements on purported transfers of copyright ownership' and that SCO has not alleged a writing sufficient to meet those strict requirements. [Novell's Mem. at 5.] Novell grossly overstates the law and mischaracterizes both the terms of the Asset Purchase Agreement, as amended, and the allegations in SCO's Complaint. As the Ninth Circuit has held in a leading case on the subject, '[t]he [§204(a)] rule is really quite simple: If the copyright holder agrees to transfer ownership to another party, that party must get the copyright holder to sign a piece of paper saying so. It doesn't have to be the Magna Charta; a one-line pro forma statement will do.' Effects Associates, Inc. v. Cohen, 908 F.2d 555, 557 (9th Cir. 1990). The Asset Purchase Agreement as amended and as alleged in SCO's Complaint clearly meets the requirements of a Section 204(a) writing.

"SCO's allegations, together with the plain language of the Asset Purchase Agreement, as amended, are sufficient to establish SCO's ownership of the UNIX and UnixWare copyrights and the falsity of Novell's public representations to the contrary. Novell asks this Court to ignore the allegations in SCO's Complaint and declare that Novell owns the UNIX and UnixWare copyrights because Novell claims the Asset Purchase Agreement as amended is not a sufficient writing to transfer the UNIX and UnixWare copyrights to SCO under Section 204(a) of the Copyright Act. Novell is wrong and has misstated the law regarding Section 204(a)."

Now Novell is asking the judge to hold them to this legal standard. If you look at SCO's Motion to Remand, filed later, their argument about 204(a) has morphed into a denial that it applies at all:

"In its removal papers, Novell claims that for the Court to determine the falsity of Novell's claims of purported ownership of the UNIX and Unixware copyrights, the Court must consider the parties' 1995 Asset Purchase Agreement. Novell claims that because Section 204(a) of the Copyright Act provides that copyrights may only be transferred by a written instrument, note or memorandum, SCO's claim arises under the Copyright Act because the Court must determine whether the 1995 Asset Purchase Agreement is a written instrument, note, or memorandum. Numerous courts have considered and rejected the precise argument Novell makes in this case. . . .

"While SCO believes this Court can fully and properly address the issues raised in SCO's Complaint, this Court lacks subject matter jurisdiction to do so. This is a Utah common law tort action for slander of title and involves the interpretation of a contract. Novell has failed to meet its burden of establishing jurisdiction on federal question grounds under 28 U.S.C. 1331, and this case should be remanded to the Third Judicial District Court for the State of Utah where it may proceed forward on the merits."

I have a theory as to why SCO so much desires this case to be defined as a contract case, not a copyright case. Here's my theory. Remember in the SCO-Novell correspondence there was a July 8, 2003 letter from Novell to SCO telling them to stop interviewing prior Novell employees?

"Novell hereby demands that SCO cease all communications with former Novell executives on matters arising out of or relating to their employment with Novell."

I'm guessing that SCO may have found one or two willing to testify that the APA and Amendment 2 intended to transfer the copyrights. That doesn't necessarily mean it is true. It means they may have found somebody willing to say so, for whatever motivation. It would be up to the jury to decide who to believe. Obviously though, if SCO had such potential witnesses, it would be a plus for them.

If that guess is correct, then framing this matter as a contract case has an advantage to SCO, because it can then use those witnesses. In a contract dispute, if the document itself is unclear, then the way you decide what it meant is by asking the parties to it or witnesses to it or somebody who might know what the parties intended, as well as looking at the conduct of the parties after the contract was executed. SCO raised the issue of there being new executives at Novell, and they raised the issue of intent, in their Memorandum in Opposition. That is what gave me the clue that they may have witnesses and may be hoping to send the case back to the local Utah court defined as a contract case, hoping the judge there says the APA and Amendment 2 are not clear on their face, so it will be necessary to determine the parties' intent. Then SCO can trot out whoever they may have lined up to testify on their side. Novell probably discerns the strategy, and therefore it is in their best interest to define the case as a copyright case, in federal court, where if there is a document purporting to be a conveyance of copyrights that is unclear, it is decided in favor of the original copyright holder, meaning Novell. This is just my theory, mind you, but it is perfectly normal for lawyers to try to figure where and how they have their best shot and then try to have the case heard there.

Novell knows that both of SCO's documents are being read by the same judge, the Memorandum in Opposition to the Motion to Dismiss and SCO's Motion to Remand, and that they are contradictory, so here they say, Your Honor, SCO has already conceded that 204(a) applies, so don't forget that when you are thinking about how to rule on the Motion to Remand, and don't miss that their two arguments don't match. And as far as this Motion to Dismiss goes, please decide it based on their concessions. Now you may have some insight into why SCO asked the judge to rule on the Motion to Remand first, and why Novell leads with what they call concessions on SCO's part.

Here is footnote 1 from SCO's Motion in Opposition:

"[1] SCO has filed a Motion to Remand this case to state court on the basis that this Court lacks subject matter jurisdiction. This Court should not address Novell's Motion to Dismiss until it has addressed and ruled on SCO's Motion to Remand. See In re Bear River Drainage District, 267 F.2d 849 (10th Cir. 1959) (when a district court is faced with a motion to remand and a motion to dismiss, the court should 'rule first on the motion to remand' and if granted send 'the motion to dismiss back to state court'). While SCO may in fact prefer having its claim heard in federal court, it is obligated to raise the issues that SCO believes preclude this Court from exercising jurisdiction over this case."

Novell had until yesterday, the 26th, to answer SCO's Motion to Remand, so we don't yet know what they will say in answer. We should find out Monday or Tuesday, at the latest Wednesday.

SCO's opposition brief largely ignores the text of the APA. SCO does not rebut Novell's textual analysis that the APA, even as amended by Amendment No. 2, constitutes, at most, a contractual promise to assign, under certain conditions, certain rights falling under the rubric of "copyright". Notwithstanding its appeal to some divined "intent of the parties" based on facts outside the complaint, SCO is unable to show that the APA as amended actually conveyed copyright ownership to SCO's alleged predecessor, and hence its complaint must fail. [1]

I'm sure you noticed that they say "alleged predecessor", not "predecessor". No doubt they expect this issue to come up, one way or another in the future, so they make clear they intend to argue this point eventually, should it prove necessary.

If you go back and reread Novell's Motion to Dismiss and then SCO's response, I think you'll have to agree that SCO didn't rebut all of Novell's arguments point by point. Novell argued in detail that at most this was a conditional promise of a possible future transfer that never occurred. SCO talks about the intent of the parties and that the leadership at Novell changed, as if to say, Your Honor, don't go by the intent of the current crop of executives. But such arguments don't seem to belong in a motion to dismiss.

Here's SCO's footnote 2 from their Memorandum in Opposition:

"[2] Novell's management at the time of the Asset Purchase Agreement that transferred the copyrights to SCO is largely no longer at Novell."

Go by what they intended back then, Your Honor, SCO is implying. Novell responds to that implication by saying that you can't prove intent by facts outside of the complaint in a motion to dismiss, and the complaint didn't say a word about a changing of the guard, so it's really not relevant, as you can see in their footnote 1 below, which says:

"[1] SCO's reference to 'facts' outside of the complaint is not limited to the intent of the parties as to the APA, but also includes that Novell's management has changed and that 'Novell's slander campaign was directly timed to its change of senior executive management and its decision to embrace Linux-related business activities in partnership with IBM.' (Opp'n at 3). The latter statement is simply untrue. More to the point, statements outside of the complaint are not to be considered in deciding a motion to dismiss. MacArthur v. San Juan County, 309 F.3d 1216, 1221 (10th Cir. 2002), cert. denied, 123 S. Ct. 226 (2003)."

I am stumped as to why SCO made these arguments. Maybe a reader can explain. The only possibility that comes to me is that it hopes to raise "facts" in dispute, in a hope that it will cause the motion to dismiss to fail.

SCO's reliance on its claim for attorneys' fees in this action for its required pleading of special damages is also unavailing, as Utah courts have rejected this very theory. SCO's complaint should be dismissed for this reason as well.

Here Novell summarizes what it is about to argue in detail, that Utah courts have already rejected the very argument SCO makes. When you tell a judge who is obligated to follow Utah law, whenever state law is relevant to a case, that Utah cases have already decided something, you get his or her attention. That's because they are supposed to follow prior cases in that state, unless they have a mighty good reason. So this is letting the judge know that some good Utah cases are going to be presented that Novell feels should be controlling.

I. SCO'S COMPLAINT SHOULD BE DISMISSED BECAUSE NOVELL'S
STATEMENTS REGARDING COPYRIGHT OWNERSHIP ARE TRUE.

This is a direct response to SCO's subhead in their Motion in Opposition:

"I. SCO IS THE OWNER OF THE UNIX AND UNIXWARE COPYRIGHTS PURSUANT TO THE ASSET PURCHASE AGREEMENT AND NOVELL'S PUBLIC STATEMENTS TO THE CONTRARY ARE FALSE."

It's also a complete defense to slander of title. SCO's slander of title action depends on SCO being able to prove fraud or deceit on Novell's part. Truth is a checkmate to a slander of title action, consequently, and so Novell lays it before the judge. If he agrees with them, the case is over. I believe that is likely the decision that he will reach, which is why SCO put in the Motion to Remand and demanded that it be decided first.

As we've pointed out before, in a slander of title action, there are necessary elements you have to prove to win. It's like when you hit the ball in baseball, you don't get a home run unless you actually run around and touch all the bases. You can't just stand there and say, It's out of the ballpark, so I don't need to bother running around. In slander of title, here are the elements you must "touch" to get your "home run" in Utah:

". . .[t]o prove slander of title, a claimant must prove that (1) there was a publication of a slanderous statement disparaging claimant's title, (2) the statement was false, (3) the statement was made with malice, and (4) the statement caused actual or special damages." (First Sec. Bank of Utah, N.A. v. Banberry Crossing, 780 P.2d 1253 (Utah 1989)).

Novell cited this case in their pleadings. So, if Novell is telling the truth that they are the owners of the copyrights, or even if they sincerely believe they are and have some rational reason for their belief, they ipso facto can't be guilty of slander of title. That's why Novell pleads truth. Also presumably because they believe it is true, based on the arguments they are about the present to Judge Kimball. Here's how they sum up in their original Memorandum in Support of Motion to Dismiss:

"The Complaint fails, however, to allege facts sufficient to support two necessary elements of slander of title: falsity and special damages. As to falsity, the documents SCO relies upon to establish ownership of the copyrights fail on their face to meet the federal copyright law requirements for such an instrument. Without conclusively establishing that it owns the UNIX and UnixWare copyrights, SCO cannot show that Novell's statements to the contrary are false, and cannot prevail. As to special damages, SCO has not set forth its alleged special damages sufficently to state a claim."

In its opposition, SCO does not dispute core propositions in Novell's opening brief:

  • In order to survive a motion to dismiss, SCO must plead facts sufficient to show the falsity of Novell's statements that copyrights were not transferred. (Memorandum in Support of Motion to Dismiss ("Opening Br.") at 4.)
  • Where allegations of fact are at variance with the terms of documents attached to the complaint, the documents control. (Id at 3-4.)
  • Section 204(a) of the Copyright Act mandates a written instrument of conveyance in order to effect a transfer of copyright ownership and governs the determination whether a particular writing constitutes such an instrument. (Id. at 5.)

Here Novell points out three things they say SCO probably should have argued but instead conceded, by not offering a rebuttal to what Novell wrote in their Memorandum in Support of Motion to Dismiss. First, SCO had the obligation to prove Novell wasn't truthful in claiming ownership of the copyrights, but they didn't do so, Novell argues. Second, Novell asserted that if alleged facts disagree with the actual APA and amendments, then the documents trump SCO's alleged facts. And third, SCO failed to argue against Novell's Section 204(a) argument, that it requires a specific writing clearly conveying the specific copyrights and that it is the legal standard.

The middle one is the only one not yet explained, so here goes. SCO argued this way:

"In considering a motion to dismiss, a court must take the allegations of the complaint at face value and must construe them favorably to the plaintiff. The allegations in the plaintiff's complaint are presumed true. Miller v. Glanz, 948 F.2d 1562, 1565 (10th Cir. 1991). A court should not grant a motion to dismiss unless it appears beyond doubt that the plaintiff could prove no set of facts supporting the claim which would entitle plaintiff to relief. Huxall v. First State Bank, 842 F.2d 249, 250- 51 (10th Cir. 1988). The court's function on a Rule 12(b)(6) motion is merely "to assess whether the plaintiffs complaint alone is legally sufficient to state a claim for which relief may be granted." Miller, 948 F.2d at 1565."

In their Memorandum in Support, Novell reponded by carefully presenting to the judge lengthy arguments as to why SCO's allegations didn't match what the actual documents say. They presented cases showing that in such a situation the judge doesn't have to accept as true the allegations of the plaintiff. Instead, the judge must choose the documents over alleged facts. Here are the cases Novell used to present and support that conclusion:

"The trial court need not accept as true 'allegations of fact that are at variance with the express terms of an instrument attached to the complaint as an exhibit and made a part thereof.' Jackson v. Alexander, 465 F.2d 1389, 1390 (10the Cir. 1972). In such instances, the instrument controls. GFF Corp. v. Associated Wholesale Grocers, 130 F.3d 1381, 1385 (10th Cir. 1997); Jackson, 465 F.2d at 1390. Therefore the Court should ignore any allegations in the Complaint that are contradicted by the Asset Purchase Agreement and Amendment No. 2."

Thus, despite SCO's references to its ownership allegations in the complaint (Opp'n at 5), unless the APA and/or Amendment No. 2 constitute a written instrument of conveyance of all UNIX and UnixWare copyrights, the motion to dismiss should be granted. SCO, by failing to rebut, also concedes key points as to how the APA and Amendment No. 2 must be understood. SCO does not dispute that a purported assignment must be construed in favor of the copyright holder and against a transfer of any copyrights. (Opening Br. at 10.) SCO does not contest that Section 1.1(a), with its language promising to transfer certain assets and excluding specifically the Excluded Assets, is the operative portion of the agreement specifying which assets are to be transferred. (Id. at 5-6.) SCO also does not contest that Schedule 1.1(b) excluded copyrights from the APA. (Id. at 6.) SCO does not rebut Novell's point that Attachment E of the Seller Disclosure Statement, which contains a list of copyrights, is not relevant to the issue of copyright ownership. (Id. at 9 n.3.) In sum, SCO does not dispute that the UNIX and UnixWare copyrights were excluded from the assets to be transferred under the APA when it was executed.

This is just devastating to SCO's position. Here Novell makes a list of all the other things that SCO failed to contest or rebut. It adds up to four key claims that Novell argued and they say SCO simply didn't respond to directly. This is not good for SCO. And the thing is, there shouldn't be any further opportunity to do so, not on this Motion to Dismiss. Unless there is an oral hearing scheduled, which I have seen no indication of, SCO has had its say.

The most important thing in legal documents is not to leave any strings dangling. You may have observed how when answering a complaint, the defendant will say that it admits, denies or lacks facts sufficient to admit or deny, and if the last, then it denies, just in case. Some of you thought that was a bit much, judging by some comments, but really it is essential not to leave any accusation or argument unanswered, because it can end up deemed conceded. So far in this document, Novell has presented a list of 7 items it argues should be deemed conceded. Seven is a lot. If my attorney failed to rebut seven items, I'd fire him or her. But it's not the last one.

SCO also fails to contest that Amendment No. 2, standing alone, does not constitute a written instrument of conveyance sufficient to transfer copyright ownership. (Id. at 6.)

Here is another biggie, number 8 on Novell's conceded items list. SCO failed to contest Novell's claim that Amendment 2 is insufficient to be a "written conveyance" as per the requirements of copyright law. SCO has already conceded that the APA excluded copyrights, according to this Novell list, so if the APA didn't convey copyrights, then Amendment 2 had better do so, but SCO failed to rebut Novell's assertion that it can't because it's insufficient, standing alone.

The only remaining question, therefore, is whether the APA as amended meets the requirements of section 204(a), as SCO contends. (Opp'n at 7.) Because it constitutes only a promise to assign, and not an instrument of conveyance, and because it is so vague as to be indeterminate on the issue of which copyright rights to which works were supposedly transferred, the amended APA does not meet the requirements of section 204(a) and SCO is unable to demonstrate ownership.

Here Novell says that after all SCO's concessions, there remains only one issue for the judge to decide: does the APA as amended meet the requirements to be an instrument of conveyance under the law or was it merely a promise to assign? The APA alone didn't convey the copyrights; Amendment 2 didn't either. But what if you put the two together? Then did they convey the copyrights? They answer no, that it's a conditional promise to assign, not a sufficient written conveyance. It doesn't list which copyrights were involved, Novell says, the way it should if it were an intended transfer sufficient to meet the requirements of Copyright Law. Consequently, they argue, SCO has failed to prove it is the owner of the copyrights. They now elaborate on some cases to support their conclusion.

A. The Amended APA Constitutes At Most a Promise to Transfer Copyrights.

Having conceded that the APA before Amendment No. 2 excluded all copyrights from transfer, and that Amendment No. 2 is not a stand-alone instrument of conveyance, SCO's lead argument is that lurking in the 50-page APA as amended there must be an instrument of conveyance somewhere that satisfies section 204(a)'s requirements.

Here Novell is mocking SCO, and they are referring to this paragraph from SCO's Memorandum in Opposition:

"Novell claims in its Motion to Dismiss that the nearly 50-page Asset Purchase Agreement between Novell and SCO, together with its numerous schedules and amendments, was not a sufficient 'writing', 'note', or 'memorandum' under Section 204(a) of the Copyright Act to transfer the UNIX and UnixWare copyrights from Novell to SCO. Novell then claims that because it purportedly owns the UNIX and UnixWare copyrights, Novell's public representations of ownership are not false and therefore SCO has not alleged a claim for slander of title."

Novell is making fun of SCO's apparent argument that 50 pages is a lot of pages, so it must be enough. The law says there are necessary elements to make it sufficient as a true copyright conveyance, and if they are present, one sentence is enough. If the elements are lacking, it doesn't matter how many pages you have.

SCO cannot point, however, to any language of assignment anywhere in the amended APA. Indeed, SCO ignores that in its own complaint it seeks a court order transferring the copyrights from Novell, a request that is at odds with its position that it already owns the copyrights. (See Opening Br. at 5.) [2]. Instead, it challenges Novell's reading of the case law and asserts that the issue here is the parties' intent. (Opp'n at 6-7.) SCO's argument does not withstand analysis.

Here is the section from the Complaint Novell refers to, number 3 in the Prayer for Relief section:

"WHEREFORE, Plaintiff SCO prays this Court grant relief against Defendant Novell in favor of SCO as follows: . . .3. For a preliminary and permanent injunction (a) requiring Novell to assign to SCO any and all copyrights Novell has registered in UNIX and UnixWare. . . . "

The fundamental problem with SCO's opposition is its failure to reckon with section 204(a)'s requirement of a written instrument "of conveyance." What SCO must do is show that there is some instrument, in writing, in which an actual transfer of ownership occurs. See Arachnid, Inc. v. Merit Indus., Inc., 939 F.2d 1574, 1581 (Fed. Cir. 1991) (agreement containing only a promise to assign distinguished from case in which the contract read "seller 'hereby sells' the patent and buyer 'hereby purchases.'") (distinguishing Sims v. Mack Trucks, Inc., 407 F.Supp. 742 (E.D.Pa. 1976)). SCO has not identified that written instrument. Absent such a written instrument, ownership could not have transferred. Effects Assoc., Inc. v. Cohen, 908 F.2d 555, 557 (9th Cir. 1990)("[S]ection 204 of the Copyright Act invalidates a purported transfer of ownership unless it is in writing.")

I couldn't find a free version of these cases online for you to read. However, the Arachnid case is referred to in another case that is available, and it explains it. Here is what the judge in Gaia Technologies, Inc. v. Reconversion Technologies, Inc., et al said the Arachnid case decided:

"The facts of this case are similar to Arachnid, Inc. v. Merit Industries, Inc., 939 F.2d 1574, 19 USPQ2d 1513 (Fed. Cir. 1991). In Arachnid, IDEA and Arachnid entered into a 1980 agreement whereby IDEA was to provide consulting services to Arachnid. The agreement provided that any inventions conceived by IDEA would be the property of Arachnid and that all rights would be assigned by IDEA to Arachnid. After the agreement was terminated, several IDEA employees filed a patent application and assigned the application to IDEA. The application matured into a patent that accordingly issued to IDEA. On May 6, 1985, IDEA granted a non-exclusive license to Merit to practice the invention of the patent, and Merit sold devices covered by the patent during 1985 and 1986. Arachnid then sued Merit for infringement of the patent during that time period. Id. at 1576-77, 19 USPQ2d at 1514-15.

"On appeal to this court, Merit argued that Arachnid was not the owner of the patent at issue and thus lacked standing to bring the patent infringement action. Arachnid contended that it held legal title to the patent based on the 1980 consulting agreement between IDEA and Arachnid. Id. at 1577-78, 19 USPQ2d at 1516. This court flatly rejected Arachnid's argument, stating:

the fact remains that the Arachnid/IDEA consulting agreement was an agreement to assign, not an assignment. Its provision that all rights to inventions developed during the consulting period 'will be assigned' by IDEA to Arachnid does not rise to the level of a present assignment of an existing invention, effective to transfer all legal and equitable rights therein to Arachnid and extinguish any rights of IDEA.

That case, Novell argues, is similar to this one. What the APA and Amendment 2 are is a conditional promise to convey, not an actual conveyance. They presented this case in their original Memorandum in Support of the Motion to Dismiss, so SCO had the opportunity to try to rebut.

Seeking to avoid the basic distinction between a promise to assign and an instrument of conveyance, SCO states that authority cited by Novell is not "remotely comparable to this case" and attempts to distinguish Li'l Red Barn because it concerned only "an agreement that a trademark could be reassigned upon the occurrence of a breach." (Opp'n at 9 n.4.) That case, however, like the others cited by Novell and ignored by SCO, recognizes the general proposition that an agreement of future assignment does not constitute an actual assignment. Li'l Red Barn, Inc. v. The Red Barn Sys., Inc., 322 F.Supp. 98, 107 (N.D.Ind. 1970), aff'd 174 U.S.P.Q. (BNA) 193 (7th Cir. 1972) (applying general rule in connection with assignment of trademarks); see also Arachnid, Inc., 939 F.2d at 1580-81 (same in conection with patents); Monarch Licensing, Ltd. v. Ritam Int'l, Ltd., 24 U.S.P.Q.2d (BNA) 1456, 1459 (S.D.N.Y. 1992) (same in connection with trademarks and copyrights). SCO cites no case that holds that a promise to assign constitutes an actual assignment, and thus has no support for its attempt to blur the well-recognized distinction between the two.

Novell here sums up: We have presented a number of cases, which SCO has failed to rebut adequately. SCO failed to find any case that overthrows the premise that a promise to convey is not an actual conveyance. Therefore, Arachnid and the other cases cited should be followed. Without a doubt, SCO should have offered a case to rebut Arachnid. It doesn't even mention the case in the Memorandum in Opposition. It did offer this in regard to the Li'l Red Barn case, in footnote 4:

"[4] For example, Novell cites Li'I Red Barn, Inc. v. The Red Barn System, Inc., 322 F.Supp. 98 (N.D. Ind. 1970). In that case, the parties entered into an agreement providing that a trademark would be reassigned if the purchasing party defaulted in the performance of the terms of a purchase agreement. The court merely held that an agreement that a trademark could be reassigned upon the occurrence of a breach was not an actual assignment. Id. at 107. That case does not support Novell's motion."

SCO's argument that the copyrights were transferred because the time to assign has come and gone (Opp'n at 9) is contradicted by the documents.

So you can follow, here's what SCO argued on this point:

"Novell also claims that because the Asset Purchase Agreement states that Novell 'will sell, convey, transfer, assign, and deliver' UNIX and UnixWare to SCO 'on the Closing Date,' the Asset Purchase Agreement was merely a promise to assign assets in the future (at the Closing Date) and therefore does not meet the requirements of Section 204(a). Again, Novell's argument is meritless. The Closing occurred in December 1995. Novell received 6.1 million shares of stock from SCO and SCO received all rights and ownership in UNIX and UnixWare and the copyrights related thereto from Novell and has exercised those rights unfettered for more than eight years. The allegations in the Complaint make this clear and must be accepted as true for purposes of Novell's Motion. The cases Novell cites do not involve Section 204(a) and are not remotely comparable to this case."

The APA was signed on September 19, 1995. In that document, Novell agreed that on the Closing Date (December 6, 1995) it would assign all assets on Schedule 1.1(a) but that it would transfer no assets listed on Schedule 1.1(b), the Excluded Assets schedule. (APA Section 1.1(a).) [3] There is no dispute that copyrights were expressly listed on the "Excluded Assets" schedule. Thus, even if, as SCO maintains, the assignment of something was self-executing on the Closing Date, no copyrights were transferred to SCO's alleged predecessor on that date. SCO's observation that Novell received 6.1 million shares of stock from SCO is irrelevant to the issues at hand and does nothing to alter the fact that no copyright transfer occurred. (Opp'n at 9.)

Over ten months later, the parties entered into Amendment No. 2. By its terms, the amendment was not retroactive to the date of the APA, but instead was effective only as of October 16, 1996, and thus could not have effected (or affected) a transfer that supposedly occurred on a self-executing basis ten months earlier. (Amendment No. 2 at 1 ("As of the 16th day of October 16, 1996 the [APA] is amended in the following respects.").)

SCO's argument that the assignment was self-executing is also contrary to the law. In the Monarch Licensing case, the contract stated that "upon termination [Licensee] agrees to assign all rights, title and interest in the trademarks and/or copyrights to [Licensor.]" Monarch Licensing, Ltd., 24 U.S.P.Q.2d at 1459. It was undisputed that the agreement had terminated but that the Licensee had not executed an assignment following termination. Although the time to assign had passed, the court did not convert the promise to assign into an actual assignment and instead found that "[n]othing in the Agreement suggests that the assignment of trademark and copyrights provision is self-executing." Id. As such, the "most Monarch has is a contractual right to receive assignment of those rights." Id.

Monarch Licensing is on all fours with the facts here. It confirms that transfer of copyright ownership (as in the case of any ownership transaction, such as a purchase of a home) requires an actual assignment as opposed to a promise to assign, and it undermines SCO's claim that one may stretch the proper interpretation of a contract to find a self-executing assignment where none exists.

You might like to see what an actual transfer looks like, so here's the Monarch Licensing document at the USPTO.

B. The APA as Amended Is Too Indeterminate to Meet Statutory Requirements for an Instrument of Transfer.

Having conceded by its silence the law that copyright law construes a purported assignment in favor of the copyright holder and against a transfer of any copyrights, SCO fails to explain how an instrument framed in terms of copyrights that are "required" in order to exercise other rights can satisfy section 204(a) and effect a transfer of copyright ownership to it. SCO argues that because "no magic words" are required and a transfer agreement can be a "one-line" statement, the fifty-page APA is sufficient. (Opp'n at 6.) While a simple writing of conveyance may satisfy section 204(a) in some circumstances ("I hereby transfer the copyright in the attached manuscript to Publisher" would probably be sufficient), the instrument of conveyance must be clear in defining the copyrights that are transferred.

Thus, in Radio Television Espanola S.A. v. New World Entm't, Ltd., there were numerous written documents that plaintiff argued transferred the copyrights, but the court found that none of the documents, read individually or together, had the clarity required to constitute valid instrument of conveyance under section 204(a). 183 F.3d 922, 927-28 (9th Cir. 1999). The court observed that "the writing should 'serve as a guidepost for the parties.'" Id. [4] Where the written documents fail to do so adequately, they do not satisfy section 204(a).

Again, this is a case Novell used in its Memorandum in Support of Motion to Dismiss:

"The Copyright Act, however, imposes very strict requirements on purported transfers of copyright ownership. Under section 204(a) of the Act, '[a] transfer of copyright ownership, other than by operation of the law, is not valid unless an instrument of conveyance, or a note or memorandum of the transfer, is in writing and signed by the owner of the rights conveyed or such owner's duly authorized agent.' 17 U.S.C. § 204(a); Radio Television Espanola S.A. v. New World Entm't, Ltd., 183 F.3d 922, 926 (9th Cir. 1999). 1 Here, the documents relied upon by SCO do not constitute such an instrument of conveyance."

SCO's response to Novell's use of this case and the other two previously cited on the need for specificity was this:

"The purpose of Section 204(a) is to 'protect copyright holders from persons mistakenly or fraudulently claiming oral licenses or copyright ownership.' Imperial Residential Design, Inc. v. The Palms Development Group, Inc., 70 F.3d 96, 99 (11th Cir. 1995). 'No magic words must be included in a document to satisfy § 204(a).' Radio Television Espanola S.A. v. New World Entertainment, LTD., 183 F.3d 922, 927 (9th Cir. 1999). Courts have held that the document need not even include the word 'copyright' to constitute a valid transfer. See, e.g., Schiller & Schmidt v. Nordisco Corporation, 969 F.2d 410, 413 (7th Cir. 1992). As set forth above, the rule is simple and requires as little as a 'one-line' signed note reflecting the parties' intent to transfer copyrights. Effects Assoc., 908 F.2d at 557. See also Radio Television Espanola, 183 F.3d at 927 (holding that the Section 204(a) requirement is 'simple'); Kenbrooke Fabrics, Inc.v. Soho Fashions, Inc., 690 F.Supp. 298, 300 (S.D.N.Y. 1988) (finding that a short letter transferring ownership of certain products but never mentioning copyrights and an invoice showing payment was a sufficient writing under Section 204(a) to defeat a motion for summary judgment).

"Contrary to the above law, Novell claims in its Memorandum that Section 204(a) provides draconian requirements of specificity and clarity, and that written agreements that do not meet Novell's proposed heightened standard are invalid. Novell has not, however, cited a single case where a writing even remotely as detailed as the Asset Purchase Agreement as amended has been found insufficient under Section 204(a). In fact, of the three cases Novell cites in support of its supposed heightened standard, two did not involve written agreements. See Effects Assoc., Inc. v. Cohen, 908 F.2d 555, 557 (9th Cir. 1990) (holding that oral agreement did not meet Section 204(a) requirement of a 'writing") and Konigsberg Intl., Inc. v. Rice, 16 F.3d 355, 356 (9th Cir. 1994) (same). In the third case Novell cites, Schiller & Schmidt, Incorporated v. Nordisco Corporation, 969 F.2d 410, 412 (7th Cir. 1992), the Seventh Circuit held that a basic sales agreement that did not mention the word 'copyright' was sufficient to meet the requirements of Section 204(a). The court's opinion in Schiller & Schmidt actually supports SCO's position.

"The Asset Purchase Agreement, as amended, is clearly sufficient to meet Section 204(a)'s requirement of a 'writing,' 'note' or 'memorandum.'

"Likewise, in Playboy Enters., Inc. v. Dumas, Inc. , the plaintiff argued that the endorsement of a legend acknowledging 'payment in full for the assignment to Playboy Enterprises, Inc. of all right, title and interest in and to' the listed item was sufficient to satisfy section 204(a). 53 F.3d 549, 563-64 (2d Cir. 1995), cert. denied, 5l6 U.S. 1010. The court examined the written document and circumstances and found, contrary to plaintiff's assertions, that the written document was ambiguous as to whether copyrights were included. Hence, section 204(a) was not satisfied. Id."

It's up to the judge to read all the cases cited by both sides and decide which case or cases most resemble the facts in this case, if any, and his order will tell us exactly which case or cases he found compelling. Novell realizes this, so the lawyers take the time to argue against SCO's use of Schiller & Schmidt v. Nordisco Corp. , in harmony with the principle that you leave no argument without a rebuttal.

SCO relies heavily on Schiller & Schmidt v. Nordisco Corp., 969 F.2d 410, 413 (7th Cir. 1992). In that case, an agreement to transfer all of the assets of a business without specifically mentioning copyrights was held to comply with section 204(a). According to SCO, the APA "is significantly more detailed" than the agreement in Schiller, and therefore must satisfy section 204(a). (Opp'n at 8.) SCO's argument misses the crucial fact that in the present case, the APA as originally executed was not silent as to copyrights; it specifically excluded them. [5] SCO's repeated citation to the "all rights and ownership of UNIX and UnixWare" language from the APA is therefore beside the point. That language is found in an agreement which, when executed, expressly excluded copyrights from the assets to be transferred.

Novell says that the case SCO relies on had to do with a situation where a document was silent as to copyright. That's not the situation here, they argue. The APA specifically excluded copyrights, so there is no doubt what was intended by that document.

Nor does Amendment No. 2, signed ten months later, clearly specify the copyrights to be transferred. Rather, it contemplates a future assignment if SCO demonstrates that there are copyrights owned by Novell that are "required for SCO to exercise its rights with respect to the acquisition of UNIX and UnixWare technologies." (Amendment No. 2 (emphasis added).)

SCO maintains that all copyrights are covered by this provision, because it "could not exercise its those [sic] rights without ownership of the UNIX and UnixWare copyrights as specifically set forth in Amendment No. 2." (Opp'n at 7.) SCO thus tries to rewrite Amendment No. 2 to read "all copyrights except those copyrights in UNIX and UnixWare," but that formulation is not what the parties chose, and it is not open to SCO to elide the "required for" from Amendment No. 2.

Indeed, "required" is a strong word, and the overall structure of the APA does not support the idea that SCO needed outright ownership of all of the UNIX and UnixWare copyrights. The APA drew a sharp distinction between the existing Novell UNIX "SVRX" products and new products that SCO was expected to develop in the future. Novell was entitled to a 100% interest in on-going royalties from existing UNIX licensees (with a 5% administrative fee paid back to SCO), and had the power to prohibit SCO from entering into new licenses for SVRX products. (See e.g., APA, Sections 1.2(b), 1.6, 4.16(b).) New products that SCO developed over time, by contrast, would carry much reduced royalty obligations. (See APA at Schedule 1.2(b).)

The copyright ownership rights provided by the APA follow this same division. Schedule 1.1(b) explicitly excludes all UNIX and UnixWare copyrights from the transfer, leaving Novell as the owner. [6] To the extent that SCO authored new copyrightable software after the acquisition, SCO would own the copyrights. Amendment No. 2, far from altering this balance by transferring "all" copyrights to SCO, at most transferred rights which SCO "required" to exercise its rights in the technology. As Novell has shown, SCO required far less than total ownership of the entire bundle of rights included within all of "the copyrights." (Opening Br. at 8-9.) SCO offers no argument in response. Thus, SCO's assertion that "[a]s set forth in the Asset Purchase Agreement, SCO acquired from Novell 'all rights and ownership' in 'all versions of UNIX and UnixWare' and all copyrights related thereto" must fail. (Opp'n at 8 n.3 (emphasis added).)

Here is what Novell wrote in their Memorandum in Support of their Motion to Dismiss on this point:

"Even if the documents SCO cited facially purported to constitute an actual transfer rather than merely a promise to transfer, the agreements would still fail to satisfy the Copyright Act's conveyance requirements. In order to suffice as a written instrument of conveyance under the Copyright Act, the purported assignment must state 'precisely what rights are being transferred.' Effects Assoc., Inc. v. Cohen, 908 F.2d 555, 557 (9th Cir. 1990); Konigsberg Int'l, Inc. v. Rice, 16 F.3d 355, 357 (9th Cir. 1994). The terms of the transfer must be clear and definite in order to fulfill the purposes of the statute, to 'enhance predictability' in copyright ownership and to make intellectual property 'readily marketable.' Effects Assoc., 908 F.2d at 557; Konigsberg, 16 F.3d at 357. See also Community for Creative Non-Violence v. Reid, 490 U.S. 730, 749-50 (1989) ('Congress' paramount goal in revising the 1976 [Copyright] Act [was that of] enhancing predictability and certainty of copyright ownership.'); Schiller & Schmidt, Inc. v. Nordisco Corp., 969 F.2d 410, 412 (7th Cir. 1992) (explaining that the purpose of the analogous writing requirement in § 101(2) of the act was 'to make the ownership of property rights in intellectual property clear and definite.')

"Particularly when a purported assignment seeks to transfer something less than 'all the rights,' definiteness is required. Here, there are multiple works potentially at issue, as UNIX and UnixWare had many versions and releases. Moreover, as to any particular work, copyright ownership is comprised of a bundle of rights, which can be transferred in whole or in part. Effects Assoc., 908 F.2d at 559. Without specificity as to which particular copyrighted works and which rights within each copyrighted work's bundle of rights were purportedly transferred, the purported assignment fails.

"Amendment No. 2's vagueness as to which copyrights are at issue is glaring. It merely amends the schedule of excluded assets as follows:

"All copyrights and trademarks, except for the copyrights and trademarks owned by Novell as of the date of the [Asset Purchase Agreement] required for [Santa Cruz] to exercise its rights with respect to the acquisition of UNIX and UnixWare Technologies.

"(APA Amendment No. 2, attached at Compl. Ex. A.) Amendment No. 2 does not identify which, if any particular rights associated with which, if any, copyrighted works are 'required.' It thus fails as a written instrument of conveyance due to its vagueness, and it is insufficient to satisfy section 204(a) of the Copyright Act.3

"Contrary to SCO's assertions, Amendment No. 2 does not purport to concern 'all copyrights pertaining to the UNIX and UnixWare technologies.' Instead, it concerns only the unidentified rights that make up copyrights required for Santa Cruz to exercise its rights with respect to the acquisition of UNIX and UnixWare technologies. Not only are those rights not identified, but SCO's 'rights with respect to the acquisition of UNIX and UnixWare technologies' are identified. In the face of such vague and ambiguous language, the governing authority is clear: the purported assignment must be construed in favor of the copyright holder and against a transfer of any copyrights. Bieg v. Hovnanian Entes., Inc., 157 F. Supp. 2d 475, 480 (E.D. Pa. 2001). See Effects Assoc, 908 F.2d at 557 (stating that the writing requirement voids inadvertent transfers of copyright ownership by copyright holders)."

Long-time SCO watchers will not be amazed to see that SCO is arguing that specificity is not required.

Because the amended APA does not identify the copyrights that are "required," there is no "guidepost" for the parties or the Court meeting the requirements of section 204(a). Prevailing copyright doctrine, which SCO does not dispute, is that close calls go to the copyright owner against the purported transferee. (See Opening Br. at 10.) SCO has not demonstrated that the question is even close. Even if the APA as amended was a purported transfer of copyright ownership (as opposed to a promise of future assignment), SCO has not shown that these instruments are sufficiently clear to meet the requirements of the statute, and its claim of ownership transfer must therefore fail. Under section 204(a), SCO has failed to demonstrate that it is the owner of the copyrights in question and its slander of title complaint must therefore be dismissed.

Here, Novell sums up its argument. Being careful, they argue first that the document, the APA and the Amendment 2 together, does not identify which copyrights should go to SCO, even if it meant to convey any. This is the "even if" argument. Even if the judge were to rule against Novell and say that this was not a promise to convey but an actual conveyance, the document fails to meet the legal standard by not listing which copyrights should be transferred. Either way, Novell argues, SCO's slander of title action should be dismissed.

II. NOTWITHSTANDING ITS PRAYER FOR ATTORNEYS FEES, SCO HAS NOT ADEQUATELY PLED SPECIAL DAMAGES.

Special damages mean money you can prove you actually lost. For example, if I lose a day's pay, that exact amount lost is special damages, and if I can prove you caused the loss, I can ask the judge to make you pay me back for my loss. SCO has asked for special damages, but it offered no exact figures. Instead it argued that listing a category is enough and if not, that it should be allowed to specify them later:

"SCO has pled with sufficient particularity the damage it incurred and is continuing to incur as a result of Novell's slander of SCO's title to the UNIX and UnixWare copyrights. It has set forth the specific loss of pecuniary advantage that SCO's customers are unable to ascertain the truth of ownership in UNIX and UnixWare because of Novell's wrongful acts. SCO has also incurred legal fees protecting its valuable ownership rights in UNIX and UnixWare. SCO's allegations are sufficiently particular to "apprise" Novell of SCO's claims. Indeed, Novell knows exactly what is at issue in this case and, as alleged in SCO's Complaint, Novell has acted with the specific intent of causing SCO the precise type of damages SCO has alleged. SCO has met the pleading requirements for its claim of slander of title in this action. Novell's Motion to Dismiss should be denied. [5] . . . .

"[5] Even if the Court determined that SCO did not allege damages with sufficient particularity to apprise Novell of SCO's claim, SCO should be granted leave to amend its Complaint. This case is in its initial stage and Novell would not suffer any prejudice if SCO were granted leave to amend."

The problem with this argument is that isn't the way you normally set forth special damages. In a personal injury case, for example, your specials are your actual hospital bills, your doctor's bills, the cost for the ambulance, etc.

SCO concedes that an appropriate allegation of special damages must "apprise the defendant of such damages as must of necessity flow from that which is alleged." (Opp'n at 10, citing Cohn v. J.C. Penney Co., Inc., 537 P.2d 306, 311 (Utah 1975).) SCO also acknowledges that absent its general prayer for attorneys' fees, its damages allegations consist only of the following two items:

Customers and potential customers of SCO are unable to ascertain the truth of ownership in UNIX and UnixWare, and make decisions based thereon; and

SCO's efforts to protect its ownership of UNIX and UnixWare, and copyrights therein, are subject to a false cloud of ownership created by Novell.

(Opp'n at 10.) As these are not realized pecuniary losses, they are insufficient.

Here Novell points out that even if listing a category were sufficient, SCO has listed only future possible losses, not losses already sustained. Here is what SCO argued on this point:

"In its Memorandum, Novell has substantially overstated the Rule 9(g) pleading requirement. The Utah Supreme Court held in Cohn v. J.C. Penny Co., Inc., 537 P.2d 306 (Utah 1975) that in Utah there is no 'inflexible rule' regarding the pleading of special damages. 537 P.2d at 311. Rather, it is simply 'a question of whether or not the pleadings contain such information as will apprise the defendant of such damages as must of necessity flow from that which is alleged.' Id. see also Simmons v. Wilkin , 15 P.2d 321, 322 (Utah 1932) ('The purpose of the rule is to avoid surprise to the defendant.')- Thus, while special damages must be specifically plead, 'the law does not require that the exact dollar amount of special damages be specifically pleaded. Hodges , 811 P.2d at 162 (holding that general allegations of 'lost wages, medical expenses, and severe emotional distress' contained in a complaint are sufficient 'to satisfy the requirement of Rule 9(g)')."

Nice try, Novell answers, but allegations of "lost wages, medical expenses, and severe emotional distress" are supposed to describe losses already sustained which presumably are quantifiable at trial. But in SCO's case, it has listed no losses actually suffered to date, only vague, possible future losses. It's also probably worth pointing out that if I were sued by SCO for copyright infringement, I think I'd quote SCO's sentence that customers and potential customers are unable to determine who actually hold the UNIX copyrights, SCO or Novell. That knocks out willfulness right there, I think, not to mention that I can't infringe SCO's copyright if it doesn't have any. This isn't legal advice, of course, but I can't help noticing SCO's admission.

Valley Colour, Inc. v. Beuchert Builders, Inc. , 944 P.2d 361. 364 (Itaj 1997) ("The special damages rule requires the plaintiff to establish pecuniary loss that has been realized or liquidated."). SCO half-heartedly argues that these allegations suffice. (Opp'n at 10.) But the very cases upon which SCO relies show that SCO's allegations are insufficient. See Cohn, 537 P.2d at 310-11 (specifically pled that plaintiff could not work which resulted in loss of earnings, as well as medical expenses incurred); Hodges v. Gibson Prods. Co. , 811 P.2d 151, 162 (Utah 1991) (same). In those circumstances, defendants were apprised of the damages. Here, SCO's allegations do not identify any specific or actual loss.

SCO goes on to argue that its general prayer for attorneys' fees incurred in this action satisfies the special damages pleading requirement. (Opp'n at 10-11.)

Here is precisely what SCO said in trying to argue that attorneys' fees constitute special damages:

"SCO has also incurred legal fees protecting its valuable ownership rights in UNIX and UnixWare. SCO's allegations are sufficiently particular to 'apprise' Novell of SCO's claims."

That is insufficient. Attorneys' fees constitute special damages for purposes of a slander of title action only where they were incurred to clear plaintiff's title and undo the harm of slander of title. First Sec. Bank of Utah 780 P.2d at 1258. There, the plaintiff alleged slander of title based upon the defendant placing a notice of default on the plaintiff's property. The court found that the notice of default was false, but refused to give any weight to plaintiff's argument that the attorneys' fees it had incurred in the slander of title action constituted special damages. Id. To the contrary, it held "[plaintiff] did not incur attorney fees to clear its title or undo harm caused by the original notice of default and therefore did not establish special damages." Id.

Crediting SCO's argument would eviscerate the special damages pleading requirement. If an allegation that "uncertainty about title exists" combined with a general prayer for attorneys' fees were sufficient, plaintiffs could meet the special damages pleading requirements simply by asserting that slander of title has occurred. The law requires that plaintiffs do more in order to state a claim for relief.

Finally, SCO includes in a footnote a request for leave to amend to include additional allegations of special damages. (Opp'n at 11 n.5.) The Court should deny this request where SCO has failed to exercise its right to amend and where it has failed to indicate what facts, if any, it believes it could add to show special damages. Glenn v. First Nat'l Bank, 868 F.2d 368, 370 (10th Cir. 1989) (a request in an opposition to motion to dismiss for leave to amend "does not rise to the status of a motion" and can properly be denied).

Here Novell is saying that if SCO wanted to amend, it should have brought a motion. Just tacking on a footnote in a Memorandum in Opposition to Novell's motion is not sufficient.

CONCLUSION

No amount of hand waving can rescue SCO's complaint from its infirmities. Importantly, SCO has not proposed to amend its complaint to assert additional allegations of copyright ownership.

Once again, Novell points out something SCO failed to do. If it wanted to fix its complaint, it should have put in a motion to amend the complaint. It didn't. Therefore, at this juncture, it has to stand or fall on the documents involved in the case as they are, Novell argues.

Its slander of title claim therefore rises or falls with the contents of the APA and Amendment No. 2 attached to its complaint. These documents do not meet the copyright law's standards for an instrument of conveyance. Similarly, SCO's allegations of special damages fail when assessed against Utah's pleading requirements. For these reasons, SCO's complaint should be dismissed.

DATED: March 19, 2004

ANDERSON & KARRENBERG

_______signature___________
Thomas R. Karrenberg
John Mullen
Heather M. Sneddon
Attorneys for Defendant Novell, Inc.


[1] SCO's reference to "facts" outside of the complaint is not limited to the intent of the parties as to the APA, but also includes that Novell's management has changed and that "Novell's slander campaign was directly timed to its change of senior executive management and its decision to embrace Linux-related business activities in partnership with IBM." (Opp'n at 3). The latter statement is simply untrue. More to the point, statements outside of the complaint are not to be considered in deciding a motion to dismiss. MacArthur v. San Juan County, 309 F.3d 1216, 1221 (10th Cir. 2002), cert. denied, 123 S. Ct. 226 (2003).

This is the paragraph that started me thinking about why SCO so urgently wants to go back to state court, and resulted in my theory enunciated above.

[2] One court relied upon a plaintiff's request for a "confirmatory assignment" as further support for its determination that no assignment of trademarks and copyrights had taken place. Monarch Licensing, Ltd. v. Ritam Int'l, Ltd., 24 U.S.P.Q.2d (BNA) 1456, 1459 (S.D.N.Y. 1992). Here, SCO is not merely seeking a confirmatory assignment, but instead an injunction "requiring Novell to assign to SCO any and all copyrights Novell has registered in UNIX and UnixWare." (Compl. p. 10, Paragraph 3.)
Novell, for good measure, further distinguishes SCO's use of this case.

[3] The APA, schedules, and amendments are attached as Exhibit A to the complaint.
[4] SCO omits a critical clause when it quotes Imperial Residential Design, Inc. v. The Palms Development Group, Inc., 70 F.3d 96, 99 (11th Cir. 1995). (Opp'n at 6.) The entire quotation is as follows: "[T]he chief purpose of section 204(a), (like the Statute of Frauds), is to resolve disputes between copyright owners and transferees and to protect copyright holders from persons mistakenly or fraudulently claiming oral licensees or copyright ownership." 70 F.3d at 99 (omitted portions emphasized).
Judges don't like it if you give them only part of a quotation, if the full quotation would work against you, naturally. So Novell provides the entire quotation that SCO failed to provide.

[5] SCO's reliance on Kenbrooke Fabrics, Inc. v. Soho Fashions, Inc. , 690 F.Supp. 298, 300 (S.D.N.Y. 1988) is also misplaced. SCO argues that the combination of a short letter that did not mention copyrights and an invoice showing payment "was a sufficient writing under Section 204(a) to defeat a summary judgment motion." (Opp'n at 6). The court denied summary judgment because it found an issue of fact as to authority of the person who signed one of the documents and because the challenge as to the transfer was made by a third party. 690 F. Supp. at 301. The court found that "where the 'copyright holder appears to have no dispute with its licensee' on the issue of ownership, 'it would be anomalous to permit a third party infringer to invoke this provision against the licensee.'" Id. Following trial, however, the same court dismissed plaintiff's copyright infringement claim because the documents did not contain any reference to copyrights and were, therefore, insufficient to satisfy the requirements of section 204(a). 13 U.S.P.Q.2d (BNA) 1472 (S.D.N.Y. 1989).
This is a zinger. One of the worst things you can do in a legal document's preparation is to fail to Shephardize your cases to the end. That means to look up what happened to them as they traveled up the process through appeals or to the final order. It's part of what paralegals do. You don't want to cite a case that won in a lower court or in a summary judgment but got roundly overturned on appeal or the case turned against your position later, not if you want to show the judge a case that won. Here Novell is saying that SCO cites a case they didn't research far enough, apparently, or didn't tell what happened to the case later. They cite it as if the case proves their point, but later, it didn't, so it works against SCO to cite it. It's embarrassing when that happens. I haven't researched this particular case to see who is right, but presumably Novell did the necessary research, given the detail they offer.

[6] Such an arrangement is not unusual and is expressly contemplated in the Copyright Act. "Ownership of a copyright, or of any of the exclusive rights under a copyright, is distinct from ownership of any material object in which the work is embodied. . . ." 17 U.S.C. Section 202; 3-10 Nimmer on Copyright Section 10.09.

That's it, then. I hope you enjoyed the journey. Was there more to it than you thought? Good. That was the purpose of this exercise: to show you the process, how many levels lawyers are working with, and that it's a profession requiring real skill and even a measure of art. Like chess, there are rules to the game, but how you put it all together is the art, and there is a difference between a schoolkid playing chess and a Grand Master.


  


Novell's Reply Memorandum in Support of Motion to Dismiss - Annotated | 497 comments | Create New Account
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Mistakes Here Please
Authored by: PJ on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 02:16 AM EST
Please make a note of typos, mistakes, corrections here, so I can find them
quickly. Thanks.

[ Reply to This | # ]

OT: some SCOspeak
Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 02:25 AM EST
Loved it! Excellent work PJ...

Something slightly OT. This was found on SCO's License FAQ web page:
Does everyone who uses Linux need a SCO IP License? All commercial users of any version of Linux need an SCO IP License.

This is mighty interesting given the fact they haven't produced a single iota of SPECIFIC copyright infringement.

Could it be they are doing this to support their slander of title claim against Novell? You know, let's pretend it's ours otherwise our case is as useless as windshield wipers in a tsunami?

[ Reply to This | # ]

Novell's Reply Memorandum in Support of Motion to Dismiss - Annotated
Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 03:09 AM EST
Maybe Boiles et al should get a refresher course in law?
Especially the penalties for barrartry?

[ Reply to This | # ]

Novell's Reply Memorandum in Support of Motion to Dismiss - Annotated
Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 03:21 AM EST
Seeing the apparent mistakes of SCO's lawyers one can only guess if they really
outwit us in some unseen way or genuinely impotent.
As far as I know, they are the same who had to fight M$ on behalf of the US
government, and that case appears an utter loss of the govt.
Amazingly, I understand most of Novell's points (even without PJ's help).
So, one of the lawyers (group) must be fake, as they don't work the same way
:)

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Novell's Reply Memorandum in Support of Motion to Dismiss - Annotated
Authored by: DBLR on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 03:21 AM EST
Me thinks this sorry SCOG law suite just got blown out of the water by some very sharp Novel lawyers. :):):)

Charles

---
Some Lawyers are just like bananas, they are all crooked, yellow and slimy.

[ Reply to This | # ]

Novell's Reply Memorandum in Support of Motion to Dismiss - Annotated
Authored by: Khym Chanur on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 03:26 AM EST
That is what gave me the clue that they may have witnesses and may be hoping to send the case back to the local Utah court defined as a contract case, hoping the judge there says the APA and Amendment 2 are not clear on their face, so it will be necessary to determine the parties' intent. (Emphasis added)
If they aren't clear, then wouldn't tha mean there's some doubt? And if there's some doubt, then shouldn't a slander of title case be dismissed?
In a contract dispute, if the document itself is unclear, then the way you decide what it meant is by asking the parties to it or witnesses to it or somebody who might know what the parties intended, as well as looking at the conduct of the parties after the contract was executed. ... Novell probably discerns the strategy, and therefore it is in their best interest to define the case as a copyright case, in federal court, where if there is a document purporting to be a conveyance of copyrights that is unclear, it is decided in favor of the original copyright holder, meaning Novell.
So for copyrights that are transfered in a contract, would conflicts over them be held in a federal or state court? I'm confused.

[ Reply to This | # ]

Wittness and Jury
Authored by: borneo on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 03:33 AM EST
"I'm guessing that SCO may have found one or two willing to testify that
the APA and Amendment 2 intended to transfer the copyrights. That doesn't
necessarily mean it is true. It means they may have found somebody willing to
say so, for whatever motivation. It would be up to the jury to decide who to
believe. Obviously though, if SCO had such potential witnesses, it would be a
plus for them."

Witness, Jury yes it's where they wants to go

There are publics statement from SCOG that ancient CEO and ancients executives
from Novell are willing to testify. Ray Noorda has been said would be the first.

[ Reply to This | # ]

Novell's Reply Memorandum in Support of Motion to Dismiss - Annotated
Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 03:40 AM EST


Like chess, there are rules to the game, but how you put it all together is the art, and there is a difference between a schoolkid playing chess and a Grand Master.

I think we all know who the school kid is and who the Grand Master is in this little matchup. ;)

[ Reply to This | # ]

Novell's Reply Memorandum in Support of Motion to Dismiss - Annotated
Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 04:26 AM EST
A thing of beauty indeed.

The only query in my mind now is why such a pig's ear was made of the APA. I'm sure it was more than the fact that a different team was doing the work.

[ Reply to This | # ]

Novell's Reply Memorandum in Support of Motion to Dismiss - Annotated
Authored by: LionKuntz on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 04:28 AM EST
I have a theory as to why SCO so much desires this case to be defined as a contract case, not a copyright case. Here's my theory. Remember in the SCO-Novell correspondence there was a July 8, 2003 letter from Novell to SCO telling them to stop interviewing prior Novell employees?

"Novell hereby demands that SCO cease all communications with former Novell executives on matters arising out of or relating to their employment with Novell."

I'm guessing that SCO may have found one or two willing to testify that the APA and Amendment 2 intended to transfer the copyrights. That doesn't necessarily mean it is true. It means they may have found somebody willing to say so, for whatever motivation. It would be up to the jury to decide who to believe. Obviously though, if SCO had such potential witnesses, it would be a plus for them.

If that guess is correct, then framing this matter as a contract case has an advantage to SCO, because it can then use those witnesses. In a contract dispute, if the document itself is unclear, then the way you decide what it meant is by asking the parties to it or witnesses to it or somebody who might know what the parties intended, as well as looking at the conduct of the parties after the contract was executed. SCO raised the issue of there being new executives at Novell, and they raised the issue of intent, in their Memorandum in Opposition. That is what gave me the clue that they may have witnesses and may be hoping to send the case back to the local Utah court defined as a contract case, hoping the judge there says the APA and Amendment 2 are not clear on their face, so it will be necessary to determine the parties' intent. Then SCO can trot out whoever they may have lined up to testify on their side. Novell probably discerns the strategy, and therefore it is in their best interest to define the case as a copyright case, in federal court, where if there is a document purporting to be a conveyance of copyrights that is unclear, it is decided in favor of the original copyright holder, meaning Novell. This is just my theory, mind you, but it is perfectly normal for lawyers to try to figure where and how they have their best shot and then try to have the case heard there.



In 1995, during the Novell sale of UIX assets to Santa Cruz Operation, Darl McBride was Vice President and General Manager of of Novell's Extended Networks Division.

At least one Novell executive was disgruntled by that sale: Joe Firmage, vice president of strategy for Novell's Network Systems Group, who opposed the sale.

"I was devastated. I fought that decision at every turn--even taking it to the board of directors--but ultimately lost the battle. Defeated, I decided to leave Novell later that year, convinced that the company had made a catastrophic error."

Considering there is at least one former Novell executive who disagrees with the legal interpretation of the sale documents, that is, Darl McBride, there may be others. It is obviously in TSCOG's interest to locate support for its position in Novell, or among former Novell, employees.

On looking further into what may have transferred to Santa Cruz, Novell may have mingled considerable code it had developed, so that the AT&T/USL code that was available to IBM under their licence was quite different from the code at issue in the Novell/Santa Cruz deal. While this is no help at all in clearing Linux from TSCOG charges, it adds further credibility to Novell's claims why they were not inclined to transfer specified copyrights.

If Novell was including a large quantity of intellectual property they had developed, they would lose that development investment towards other ongoing Novell diversified operations. If Santa Cruz found that they needed some specific rights, some specific copyrights, Novell was inclined to give it, but not divest themselves unnecessarily, or even entirely.

If one goes to Novell's website Products Page, one rapidly appreciates that the developments in UNIXware are dual purpose or multipurpose in other products. There is no theory that Novell was selling "Novell, lock, stock & barrel".

The AT&T/USL UNIX copyrights were thoroughly tangled. There were parts developed by Santa Cruz (XENIX); public domain; UCB code; and some copyright-protected, some copyright-forfeited AT&T/USL code; and God only knows what else. Transferring copyrights would require a pedigree-check before documents could be drawn up to pass what portion Novell had clear "copyright" title to. The "logic" is on Novell's argument side, that copyrights were promised if good rationale was shown why they were needed, otherwise it was unnecessary expense. It turned out to be unnecessary until McBride made a grab on Linux, and even there they are unnecessary for the "UNIX business" Novell sold. The copyrights are still not needed for the UNIX business, they are needed to try to justify McBride stealing the Linux business.

[ Reply to This | # ]

OT - IT journalism
Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 04:33 AM EST
The Inquirer has an article about journalistic standards that is interesting in the light of the discussions we've had here about the matter.See Here

[ Reply to This | # ]

Thanks, PJ!
Authored by: xtifr on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 05:58 AM EST
I have to say, when I first read the Memorandum in Support, I thought it was
pretty clear (and clearly devastating). I wasn't sure that PJ's annotations
would really add that much. Boy, was I wrong! I really hadn't realized just
how many points SCOG had conceded, nor how critical some of those points were.
And I completely missed the contradictions between the Memo of Opposition and
the Motion to Remand. And much much more. PJ, if your goal was to enlighten
and inform, you have done an outstanding job, and I am sincerely grateful.

[ Reply to This | # ]

Novell's Reply Memorandum in Support of Motion to Dismiss - Annotated
Authored by: tintak on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 06:19 AM EST
Interesting stuff. Thanks PJ.
However I have a problem understanding the following sentence.

"Novell then claims that because it purportedly owns the UNIX and UnixWare
copyrights, Novell's public representations of ownership are not false and
therefore SCO has not alleged a claim for slander of title."


Since I know that SCOG has "alleged a claim for slander of title."
Should not the end of the sentence have read.
"....therefore SCO can not allege a claim for slander of title."

Can anyone point out what I am missing, or is it an example of legalspeak?


---
'it is literally impossible' for SCO to itself provide
direct proof' Mark J. Heise 02/06/04

[ Reply to This | # ]

Companies funding US Senators against EU v Microsoft Decision
Authored by: JeR on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 06:29 AM EST

This German Heise article points to this English research article in The Inquirer, which points to this US website. The links between Microsoft, EDS, Verizon and these senators are statistically quite weak, probably, but according to The Inquirer, they all spoke out against the EU v Microsoft decision...

[ Reply to This | # ]

OT. More M$ discontent.
Authored by: tintak on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 07:23 AM EST
This may be of interest to Groklaw readers.

http://www.theinquirer.net/?article=15001

The wave rolls on.

---
'it is literally impossible' for SCO to itself provide
direct proof' Mark J. Heise 02/06/04

[ Reply to This | # ]

Novell's Reply Memorandum in Support of Motion to Dismiss - Annotated
Authored by: a_dreamer on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 07:51 AM EST
PJ, you are GOOD!
The way you laid this stuff out was a work of art.
Thanks

[ Reply to This | # ]

Novell's Reply Memorandum in Support of Motion to Dismiss - Annotated
Authored by: Stumbles on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 08:01 AM EST
That was an excellent piece of analysis PJ. You are good.

I may have missed it some where. But doesn't the APA state, rather
clearly if there are changes of management (or to that effect) with the
licensee, the licensor can terminate all rights of the licensee?

My point, no matter how The SCO Group wants to slice and dice the
APA and it's amendments, Novell is still in the drivers seat because
of that statement.

[ Reply to This | # ]

OT: Darl's feet ?
Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 08:17 AM EST
I'm concerned by Darl McBride's silence. Do you reckon he is
looking for new feet ? Should we, as a helping comunity
create a Fund To Buy a Couple of (Pairs of) Feet for Darl McBride ?
Maybe that's all he needs to reload the fastest shooting
mouth in the US ?

Loïc

[ Reply to This | # ]

Novell's Reply Memorandum in Support of Motion to Dismiss - Annotated
Authored by: blacklight on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 08:25 AM EST
I don't know if it makes any difference how many Novell executives testify in
favor of the SCO Group's interpretation of the APA, given that: (1) copyrights
transfer was explicitly excluded in the main body of the APA; (2) Amendment 2
does not explicitly list which copyrights are to be transferred. Given that
Novell owns Netware copyrights and copyrights on Unixware that also have direct
application to its other technologies, and that Novell explicitly excluded
copyrights transfer in the main body of the APA, I'd say that to meet the
copyrights transfer requirements of Section 204 of the US Copyrights Act: either
an explicit list of copyrights would have to be attached, or a statement stating
which copyrights are to be transferred so that it is also clear which copyrights
are not to be transferred. I submit that Amendment 2 is pretty specific that
only those copyrights are to be transferred that are required for the SCO Group
to conduct its proxy-licensing business - and the historical fact is that none
were transferred, leading to the not unreasonable imputation that none were
transferred because none were needed to run the proxy-licensing business.

If Novell's intent at the time was to transfer any and all Unixware and UNIX
copyrights, then Ray Norda will have a hell of a time explaining why the terms
of the APA don't reflect that intent, given that it indisputably was within his
power to have the APA written so that the copyrights transfer would be in
compliance with Section 204 of the US Copyrights Act. In addition, given that
the terms of the APA were negotiated over a period of months, Norda could have
put in the terms he intended at any time during these months - It is my
presumption that Old SCO would have done anything but oppose this inclusion,
which would clearly have benefited them. Finally, Novell negotiated and signed
the APA on its own free will, without any coercion involved.

I would argue that the APA is a valid document, whose terms reflect my/our
interpretation of the intent of the signatories at the time and not the SCO
Group's interpretation - regardless of how many current and former Novell
executives the SCO Group trots up.

[ Reply to This | # ]

Novell's Reply Memorandum in Support of Motion to Dismiss - Annotated
Authored by: Mark_Edwards on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 09:47 AM EST
Thanks PJ ! Yet another piece of outstanding work that
confirms/shows all us non-lawyer's how bad SCO's various
cases are !

One thing I am wondering though is who is writing all of
SCO's legal documents? In all the various reply's by both
IBM & Novell we have seen them needing to fix statements
(Like footnote 3 above) that SCO's lawyers have stated. I
can't believe that Boies firm and Kevin McBrides firm
would exist if this is the quality of their work? Or is it
normal for court documents to constanty try and trip up
the judge with mis-quotes?


anyway once again thanks PJ for your work !

Mark.

[ Reply to This | # ]

Novell's Reply Memorandum in Support of Motion to Dismiss - Annotated
Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 10:07 AM EST
Is the paperwork that transferred the System V and Unixware rights from Santa
Cruz Operation to Caldera in 2001 available anywhere? We need to know if it
contains written transfer of the copyrights that complies with Section 204(a).

If SCO doesn't have, or cannot produce such paperwork, then their burden of
proof for copyright transfer is effectively doubled. They must prove transfer
from Novell to Santa Cruz Operation and then to Caldera.

If Santa Cruz Operation did claim to transfer the rights, but didn't have the
authority because they were never transferred by Novell, I think SCO could have
a case against Tarantella for misrepresenting what was being purchased. Maybe
even Novell could have a case against Tarantella for claiming to own Novell's
copyrighted material.

[ Reply to This | # ]

I don't think SCO's Prayer for Relief No. 3 is really turned against them
Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 10:19 AM EST
The section seems to pretty clearly refer to Novell's copyright registration
referrred to in the "Factual Background" paragraph 18.

They want the copyright registrations which Novell filed turned over to them.
That doesn't appear to undermine their claim that they own the copyrights, they
just want Novell's registrations to be clearly inoperative. "They're
invalid, but we'd have to enter into more legal proceedings with the U.S.
Copyright Office to invalidate them, so please just transfer them to us and that
will end the matter."

This is very similar to the Linux trademark issue. W.R. Della Croce, Jr.
noticed that nobody had ever applied for a "Linux" trademark with the
USPTO, so he took it upon himself to fill that void and then started shaking
people down for protection money. (Er, sending out lawyer letters asking for
licensing fees.)

This, unsurprisingly, pissed a lot of people off, including G. Gervaise Davis
III (of iplawyers.com), and the would-be protection racketeer found himself
badly outgunned.

So he transferred the trademark to Linus and quietly slunk away, and the issue
was settled. He deserved a serious spanking, but nobody felt like chasing him
through the courts to administer it, given the unlikelihood of meaningful
recovery.

While it's not pleasant to point out valid points in SCO's arguments, it's
essential to an effective overall battle plan, and I think Novell's attempt to
twist this point is not effective. SCO, in their prayer for relief, is
admitting the existence of the registrations, not their validity.

[ Reply to This | # ]

Moral of the SCO's intent story - DON'T be BLIND and TRUST YOUR LAWYER -revisited from this view
Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 10:27 AM EST
Intent is one thing... what is written in a contract or other legal document and
agreed upon by all parties that then sign, is another.

I know of 2 situations where intent when written down by parties was wrongly
written - and the parties had to live with the written wordings:

The first, was about a lawyer and his sister, where they had two properties on
the same deed. This was inherited property and the sister was very involved in
the management of the family assets. The brother, the lawyer, was not.
Afterall, he had his plate full in the lawyering business. There was a
prospective buyer of one of the properties. The brother was to handle the deal.
He transfered the whole deed to the buyer for the exchange of the price of the
property that the buyer was interested in. Except, he made a mistake and left
the other property, that was even more valuable than the first on the deed that
was transfered. It was not his sister's intent that the 2 properties be
transfered during the sale (and most likely not the brothers to give it to the
buyer for free). But, that is what the paperwork, did. The sister when she
found out, well she went thru the roof with anger over the facts and there was a
challenge. The court held that everything was legal. The proper parties during
the closing had legal representation and signed away everything. The buyer got
the 2 properties for the price of the lesser one. Yep - The devil is in the
details, and laywers can make expensive mistakes that are legal (but may not
reflect actual intent). Folks, when intent is transfered to a contract... the
contract had better reflect that intent, because if it doesn't... then you got a
problem, and if you catch the mistake before you sign it then you have time to
have the contract rewitten! Everything in the wording of any legal document
needs to be right "PRIOR TO" your John Hancock shows up on it saying
that it does reflect your intent! Good lawyers are worth what you pay them as
they will represent yoru interests well, but - you still gotta check up on them
(they too are human and humans can make expensive mistakes)!

Second, I know of another lawyer that made out a will. The intent of the party
that needed this will was to transfer all the assets to be split between two
children. This included properties and liquid assets. The lawyer left out the
part dealing with liquid assets, the party that the will was for signed the will
as prepared by the lawyer. A number of years later he died. The fact that most
of the estate was liquid meant that there was a huge amount of money that was
not dealt with by the will. So - that part of the will was intestate (under
state law). This meant that a very expensive and troubling fight over these
assets IN COURT needed to proceed in order to split up the assests that were
left out of the will by the lawyer. The intent was a 50-50 split of everything
to the 2 children by the father who signed the will. The document did not
reflect this intent... however, the father signed the will MAKING IT HIS INTENT.
The devil is in the details.

Moral of the story: Don't trust your lawyer to write down your intent as you
intended him or her to do... Always, double check your lawyers work, because
once you sign on the dotted line that you agree to the lawyer's wording... You
very well may have to live, or die, with what has been written. Don't be
blinded by a person who is a lawyer, as they don't always see things the same as
you do, and they don't always record intent in the best of ways for all
situations!

Note: - Darl may have trusted his brother too much going into this SCO mess...
and SCO stockholders may end up saying something about this in court at some
point in the future! The question is if laywer malpractice can be proven by some
court, where SCO's lawyers suddenly find themselves in the crosshairs of some
very interesting legal arguements. Ouch.

[ Reply to This | # ]

A promise to assign ... on the Closing Date
Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 10:28 AM EST
Why is it so important to Novell to keep ignoring that little detail ?
Didn't it keep its promise ?

[ Reply to This | # ]

Just A Sample?
Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 10:32 AM EST
If this is a sample of what you do for a living, Wow! It's obviously not the kind of thing that everyone can do. I know my mind doesn't work that way, to pick out minute inferences from both omissions and comissions. Thanks for the further insight into legal proceedings behind the scenes, as well as a sample of how lawyers and paralegals have to think. It's a far cry from the more logical world of technology, though I can (now) see a degree of logic in what you do.

Larry N.

[ Reply to This | # ]

Can't Novell blow this case out of the water with 15 simple words?
Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 10:40 AM EST
Novell has said in the past, when asked why they didn't release Unix to the
public domain, "We looked into it, but we found that we didn't have all the
copyrights to UNIX."

Can't they just tell the judge "We could not have sold the copyrights to
SCO, because we didn't have them ourselves?" Now clearly, this would be a
last-ditch response because it would destroy the value of the UNIX
"IP" completely, but Novell seems to be moving quickly away from UNIX
anyway. And entering that phrase into court would utterly destroy SCO.

We'll see.

Thad Beier

[ Reply to This | # ]

Citing decisions later reversed...
Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 11:34 AM EST
Citing cases where the decisions were later reversed may not be the result of
failure to do the research. It might be intentional.

There are three conditions where this can actually work in ones favor. First the
opposition fails to bring the reversal to the attention of the judge in the
pleadings and it is simply overlooked in the case blitz. Second, the judge
doesn't read the case himself (too lazy?) And third, on the assumption that the
case will not be overlooked, the judge just might decide he is not bound to
follow the case law and the reversal is ignored.

It is not unheard of to have such a case cited in a judgment. It just might be
that, as a percentage, there are as many incompetent judges as there are in any
other profession.


[ Reply to This | # ]

inexcusable lawyering
Authored by: codswallop on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 11:45 AM EST
Thanks, PJ. I think you did a lovely job (and not just because I agree with almost all of what you say). Everything SCO has done seems to indicate that they want as much as possible to be issues of contract terms decided by juries. I'd guess the motion to bifurcate is somehow designed with this in mind.

Certainly the SCO lawyers screwed up bigtime. They, couldn't be bothered to make crucial arguments. Some of what they did was amazingly sloppy.

Not pushing the contract law vs. copyright law argument as hard as possible is the first error. The last thing they want is for Judge Kendall to decide on the validity of the assignment. There were lots of precedents they could have cited, some of which they did in the motion to remand. Even if Judge Kendall denied the motion to remand, the contract aspect might have persuaded him not to dismiss or not to rule on the merits.

Their treatment of the business about the promise to assign vs. assignment is at least as bad. They didn't state their argument clearly or show how the cited cases supported it.

The argument probably was:

1) the amount of time over wjich an assignment takes place doesn't matter. There are cases supporting verbal assignments confirmed in writing months later.

2) the cases involving promises to assign are not comparable. The relationship between a contract and its closing is much more intimate than that between a contract and its termination or breach. The termination or breach could occur at any time and for any number of reasons.

Also in those cases, the parties don't engage in an act that reaffirms the agreement. This reaffirmation is exactly what take place at closing. If the parties didn't intend to reaffirm, why did they close and thus bind themselves to the terms. Moreover the parties who signed are the same as those who closed and who are parties to the alleged assignment. The case would be weaker if the contract required assignment to a third party.

3) Since most of the terms of the contract and all those relating to IP only take effect on closing, the date the agreement isn't the relevant date. It should be the date of the closing. There was a writing signed by the parties at closing, so there is a writing from the time of the alleged transfer that includes by reference the document containing the alleged transfer.

The next blooper was allowing the 1.1b language to be argued out of context. This makes it too easy to deal with it purely as a matter of copyright law. They had to argue that "required" meant something like "pertaining to". They could say something like.

If it meant that a need had to be shown, why isn't there a definition of what a need might be or any mechanism for how this demonstration was to be performed or how disputes under it were to be resolved.
They just waved their hands about the specificity issue too. They didn't even make good use of the cases they cited. One of them addresses the issue of collective transfer using the word all. They might have tried
Nobody who buys a business gets an explicit instrument for each document belonging to the business, yet we don't challenge their copyrights. There was a lot more than unix to transfer - makefiles, testing and debugging code, version control - which contains hundreds of versions, each of which is a work... Has it ever been held that explicit assignments were needed for each item?
Last, specific damages. They could have generated some. Any legal and research expenses involved with clearing their title would do. Maybe they could have sent a few lawyers to Tarantella to look for documents - different lawyers from a different firm. I'm sure if they had been willing to wait a few weeks, they could have arranged to be damaged sufficiently. They should never have filed if they were planning to use the bootstrap theory, and if they didn't know what theory they would use, that's even worse.

[ Reply to This | # ]

Novell's reason for not assigning copyrights
Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 11:53 AM EST
Schedule 1.1(b) explicitly excludes all UNIX and UnixWare copyrights from the transfer, leaving Novell as the owner. [6] To the extent that SCO authored new copyrightable software after the acquisition, SCO would own the copyrights. Amendment No. 2, far from altering this balance by transferring "all" copyrights to SCO, at most transferred rights which SCO "required" to exercise its rights in the technology.

What has always been unclear to me is, if Novell promised to transfer the copyrights, why would they make such a big deal about this, and just transfer them, if requested now.

However, am I right in thinking that Novell is saying all they promised is that SCO would have ownership of their own derivitave works, and would transfer only enough copyrights to make that happen, if proven necessary?

I'm probably stating what has been obvious to everyone...but me.

[ Reply to This | # ]

OT: Groklaw idea
Authored by: jeffcobb on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 12:31 PM EST
While this isn't directly related to the topic at hand, it
seems to apply to every topic discussed here. Often I see
innocent bystanders playing devils advocate and suggesting
ways in which SCO might argue this point or that, only to
be labelled a shill or worse.

People, while it is easiest to just preach to the chior
(SCO will lose! Rah Rah!), it actually doesn't serve us
well if we are truly trying to poke holes in SCOs various
cases. Based on what I have seen here, there is little
doubt that SCO will not survive the coming year. However,
debate is good and I honestly feel that it behooves us as
a community to closely examine every possible argument
that SCO might make in order shut each one down as the
fabrications that they are.

But since we as a group do not seem to be able to advance
possible SCO argument strategies without attacking our
own, perhaps there could be an area where theses
point-counterpoint discussions can happen without
reprisals.

The real crime *could* be that SCO pulls some bizarre
argument from....where ever...and if the good guys are not
ready for it, they might lose. Not because SCO is right
and XX (where XX = IBM, Novell, Redhat, take your pick)
but rather they have the better argument. By way of an
example, I had an old Army buddy who was always working
the system against itself so that he always had light
duty, time off, and so on. The commander ( and everyone
else in the unit) *knew* that he was doing all of these
things but because my friend always had an answer (no
matter how outrageous) for everything, he never got
caught, let alone punished. He was so good at arguing his
way out of things that would have seen the rest of us
peeling pototoes for the rest of our careers that
eventually the unit commander gave up even trying to keep
track of him; he had earned the dubious title of "Master
Shammer" or the master of getting out of work. The truth
was rarely on his side but in the end it didn't matter
because he won every time, strictly due to a better if
occasionally outlandish argument. But I digress...

Having seen this in action first hand numerous times, I
think that it might be a mistake for us to collectively
sit on the truth, thinking that truth will light the way
to SCOs demise; it might but I think that it would not
hurt to be as prepared for the unlikely as it is for the
likely.

[ Reply to This | # ]

Somewhat OT - EU vs Microsoft aftermatch
Authored by: Azriel on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 12:34 PM EST

FFII put a more detailed analysis of recent EU ruling against Microsoft:

http://swpat.ffii.org/news/04/cecms0326/

For the most part, they put "the reasonable renumeration" firmly in the context of ongoing campaign to legalise software patents in EU.

In conjunction with March IPR Enforcement directive, I am afraid this can be quite a hazard for open source development in Europe.

P.S. The IPRED itself paves way for use of extreme legal instruments - like those employed by RIAA in the States. More under this link:

http://plone.ffii.org/events/2004/ipred/

[ Reply to This | # ]

A couple of points I'm confused about
Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 01:07 PM EST
As far as I can tell, the APA (or was it the amended?) included something like
promising to assign any rights required to finalize the purchase of Unix. We
all concede that SCO purchased Unix, but there seems to be no document showing
what 'rights' they required to perform the purchase.

I see nothing in the contract to assign rights for SCO to 'protect it's IP'.


Also, is breaking of a 'promise' legally liable. As I see it, if it ain't in
writing, it didn't happen.

If I sign an agreement saying 'I give you X', then say I didn't assign X, the
contract explicitly goes against me.

If I sign an agreement saying 'I promise to assign X if you need it to secure
this transaction', then it seems clear that X is not assigned unless the
purchaser supplies a documented reason for requiring X. Even then, I would
probably need to amend the agreement explicitly assigning X.

[ Reply to This | # ]

What can happen after the dust has settled?
Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 01:38 PM EST
Sorry, this is a little off-topic and it may have been asked before:

When SCO eventually loses this case, are they in danger to be sued in return by
Novell or IBM or whoever else they attacked in their campaign?

I do not think of revenge fouls like trivial patent infringement cases but
whether they can be directly held responsible for calumny or character
assassination on the Linux developers or on one of the companies.


Michael Böhnisch

[ Reply to This | # ]

Note 6
Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 02:11 PM EST
Thank you, PJ, for your thorough notation to Novell's motion. I find your
speculation about which court each party wishes to argue in most interesting.

I would also like to point out that note 6 nicely reiterates that the rights
needed to conduct a business licensing software need not include the copyrights
to that software. A non-technical judge might overlook the distinction (as SCO's
lawyers would like her or him to do).

billwww (formerly addicted to the internet)

[ Reply to This | # ]

termination of collection fees
Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 02:23 PM EST
Was there a defined time when SCO would no longer have to remit 95% of the
collection fee back to Novell for use of system V code in SCO products? I'd say
that interpretaion of copyright transfer would be dependant on the end of
remmittance of collection fees back to Novell. Since the contract clearly states
that SCO is to perpetually receive the 95% of the fees collected then the only
viable interpretation is that intellectual property rights were never intended
to be transferred and if a situation arose whereby a transer of certain ip
rights would benefit SCO then that bridge would be crossed when it was reached.
Until that time there was no reason to transfer property rights. I would say
that this was worded this say so as to prevent SCO from doing what it is doing
now. And I'd say that any fool can see this was the intention when the contract
was drawn up. Sort of reminds me of that little jackass who became emperor in
the movie Gladiator...in the wrong hands power corrupts

[ Reply to This | # ]

This is why I read Groklaw
Authored by: dbc on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 02:29 PM EST
I know I speak for many: This kind of analysis and annotation is why I read
Groklaw. It is the only way I can make any sense of it all. Thanks, PJ!

[ Reply to This | # ]

Novell's Reply Memorandum in Support of Motion to Dismiss - Annotated
Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 03:34 PM EST
I would like to know what The Santa Cruz Operation (Tarantella) has to say about
all of these lawsuits and the copyrights. If I remember correctly Novell sold
the UNIX IP to S.C.O. not to The SCO Group. S.C.O. sold all of it's IP except
Tarantella (the product) to Caldera who then changed their name The SCO Group.
S.C.O then changed their name to Tarantella after the one remaining product they
had left. Now everyone seems to assume that TSG is S.C.O. Even TSG seems to be
confused on this point as their website claims that they are 25 years old this
year. Would Tarantella not have to be involved in this copyright case as they
are the ones who purchased UNIX from Novell?

[ Reply to This | # ]

Novell's weakest argument
Authored by: sam on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 03:37 PM EST
I'd have to say that even Novell is stretching a bit to make an argument just as
SCO has done. To me the weakness for Novell is their assertion that the APA was
a fully executed stand alone contract and amendment 2, executed 10 months later
is a mere followup promise. It's an attempt to bifurcate, if you will, a single
amended contract into two separate agreements. The reality is that contracts can
be, and frequently are retroactively amended, the amendment to carry the same
meaning and eight as the original agreement as though it were part of the
original.

Given the case law cited, if the APA were silent as to copyrights, it seems the
language "all Unix and Unixware" would have been sufficient to
transfer the copyrights even under sction 204(a). And given that amendment 2
clearly amends the language of the schedule of excluded assets of the APA,
contrary to Novell's assertions, it has to be interpreted as though it were in
the original text and applied retroactively as binding upon the assets that were
to be transferred at closing.

Novell's strongest arguments imo are in the actual wording of amendment 2 and
its vagaries, but nobody seems interested in parsing each word, especially the
part that implicates third parties and liability as necessary ingredients for
"required" copyrights. I believe the wording could and should be
construed as a future promise even if it were included in the original APA text.
Contracts frequently include provisions for future performance after specified
contingencies have been met. I would also argue that the contingency for
"required" is so vague that it is utterly unenforceable in any degree.
Maybe they'll get to this line of argument later.

The "bifurcated contract" line of argument just seems a bit flakey to
me.

OK Flame away, but I think there is a little wiggle room for some surprises.


---


Don't forget. IAAL. (I am a layman.)

[ Reply to This | # ]

OT : Our Favourite Analyst on Microsoft EC Ruling
Authored by: alan_b on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 03:44 PM EST
From today's "Observe r"
Microsoft's anger at the EC ruling is partly justified, DiDio adds. After all, the bundling of Windows Media Player was not an abuse of position to the same degree as when Microsoft crushed Netscape. But, Didio says, Gates may still have trouble understanding it. 'He's an easy target because he's the world's richest man. Has he gone out and squashed the competition like a bug? Yes. But he doesn't view it as wrongdoing. He's Darwinian in his approach; he believes the strong should survive.'

[ Reply to This | # ]

Turnabout
Authored by: CyberCFO on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 03:46 PM EST
Great work PJ, Thanks.

BTW, could Novell turn aroiund and sue SCO for slander of title after getting
SCO's slander of title suit thrown out? I'm just basking in the delicious irony
of that.

[ Reply to This | # ]

SCO doesn't care about winning?
Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 04:01 PM EST
SCO's Novell suit only confirms my suspicions about the IBM suit, too -- SCO
doesn't care if it wins.

This supports the stock scam theory, since you'll notice SCO's stock went up
nicely on Friday, likely based on the bifurcation angle.

My personal prejudice is that this also confirms Microsoft's hand in this.
Microsoft will guarantee any losses sustained to SCO investors. BayStar's $50
million is chump change to Microsoft.

It also means Microsoft's purpose is not to win in court but to win in
legislatures and parliaments, with the use of bribes. These won't be called
bribes, of course. They will be disguised as grants, as seems to be happening in
universities, and, in the U.S., campaign contributions to politicians.

SCO's legal work is so bad, I can't think of any other reasons.

[ Reply to This | # ]

OT: Canopy, Canopy companies and sealed settelments. .. ... ..... .......
Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 04:13 PM EST
I have been recently reviewing some old articles on groklaw and the press. I was
surprised as to how little one could find on litigation involving Canopy
companies like
the MonteVista vs Lineo (Canopy company), Center7 (Canopy company) vs CA, and
Caldera (Canopy conpany) vs Microsoft as it seems that the records of the case
are sealed. Have there been other Canopy companies that have been in litigation
that may have gone completely under the radar? Is it a common practice for all
the records of litigation between corporations to be sealed? Do judges decide to
seal court records at the request of both parties or do they just hand them out
like popcorn. Can a third party request that the non-confidential documents
remain open to the public? It seems that some nonconfidential parts of
settlements or court filings/poceedings could be released in the public
interest? How would one go about getting these sealed documents released to the
public or are they forever hidden from the public eye?

Thanks to PJ there is a public record of SCOG (Canopy company) litigation
against [FILL IN THE BLANK].

_[=================]_
---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---
from under the bridge

I realize I'm only the hired help here but I don't do Windows.

[ Reply to This | # ]

OT - Did Novell actually get copyrights from AT&T
Authored by: jpr on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 04:53 PM EST
Awesome job PJ!

On reading through this though, I couldn't help but wonder if Novell had
documentation from AT&T that met all of the requirements of section 204(a)
that they are citing. Did a cursory check of the database and didn't find it.
Probably there, but I missed it.

What's to prevent AT&T from saying to Novell - 'Hey wait a minute - those
are OUR copyrights, show us the transfer instruments.'?

[ Reply to This | # ]

About the cases cited...
Authored by: drh on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 06:26 PM EST
There is something that really bothers me about the cases
cited in this filing, and it's probably because I don't
understand the process correctly.

Many of the cases cited demonstrate that a promise to
convey rights does not actually transfer those rights,
even if that promise was contractual.

So, If I agree to transfer rights at the conclusion of a
project for a customer, but do not supply the required
documents for that transfer, I still own the rights? Why
is it that I cannot be held to the terms that specified I
would transfer those rights?

I know I'm missing the point here somewhere...


---
Just another day...

[ Reply to This | # ]

OT - the US constitutional and copyright
Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 07:00 PM EST
Doesn't the US constitution expressly limit the scope and power of congress to grant copyright and patent protection. In particular "only the writings and discoveries of authors and inventors may be protected, and then only to the end of promoting science and the useful arts."

Without the eventual release of source code into the public domain society will not fully benefit from the copyrighted material. Couldn't you argue that Congress cannot grant copyright protection to software without setting up some mechanism (software escrow or similar) to ensure that this happens.

[ Reply to This | # ]

Novell's Reply Memorandum in Support of Motion to Dismiss - Annotated
Authored by: chaz_paw on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 08:41 PM EST
PJ, once again you have outdone yourself. I read this article twice, as well as
many of the comments. You have given many of us a view into the workings of the
law that we did not know even existed.

I must add that it does look like SCO did in fact "buy the Brooklyn
Bridge" as suggested in other articles outside Groklaw.

Keep up the good work.

Charles

---
United we stand.

[ Reply to This | # ]

boondoggle
Authored by: floyds_void on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 10:54 PM EST
I congratulate PJ on making the legalese readable. It is beginning to appear to
me that lawyering is like programming except that there's a lot more
uncertainity in lawyering. IOW a legal argument may work only 90% of the time
but a program may work 99.999% of the time (you know, cosmic rays and quantum
fluctations and that sort of thing).

Anyway, SCO's argument seems to be Santa Cruz Organization ([old] SCO) spent a
pile of money for Unix IP, so surely SCO must own some lousy copyrights in
addition to a 50 page document filled with legalese and an ammendent or two.

Novell's argument seems to be that [new] SCO doesn't seem to have in its
possession the one-liner note actually transferring the copyrights.

The question is this: Was it deliberate that Novell didn't explicitly transfer
copyrights to [old] SCO ?? (well, yes, duh) Was [old] SCO reticent or derelict
in accepting these terms while paying a couple of hundred million ??

Did Novell keep the agreement deliberately vague to have this `backdoor'
argument against successors ?? Do you think Novell was aware of this backdoor
when litigation broke out (considering executive management had changed) or did
they `rediscover' it ?? Is this kind of vagueness common in mutli-million
dollar deals to act as a kind of hedge ??

Lots of questions, no answers

[ Reply to This | # ]

The Microsoft Advertisement Theory
Authored by: Anonymous on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 11:04 PM EST
Microsoft secretly (or maybe now not so secretly) controls SCO. SCO has 2
purposes: 1) to serve as an advertisement for Microsoft and 2) to make money
for insiders. Microsoft sees it's 100 million dollar investment in SCO as part
of its advertising budget and doesn't expect any ROI. You see, the longer SCO
keeps this charade going the more Microsoft can capitalize on all the negative
press against Linux. Once SCO is gone, Microsoft will find another company to
launch attacks from indirectly to keep the negative press going. For their
roles, Darl et al get golden parachutes. Have you noticed Darl et al always
have this happy grin and seem like they are on different planets when they are
interviewed? They are salivating over all the money they will receive when this
caper comes to an end. It is really quite clever actually.

[ Reply to This | # ]

Thank you, PJ.
Authored by: Tomas on Sunday, March 28 2004 @ 11:20 PM EST
The Novell lawyers put out a very nicely done document here, and your breaking
it down and explaining it has made it even more enjoyable by pointing out some
of it's more subtle features I may otherwise have missed.

One thing that has bothered me repeatedly is the "missing" documents
detailing the SCO/Tarantella sale of two of it's divisions to Caldera/TSCOG. If
one is running a multimillion dollar company who's very life depends on the
documents describing what it has purchased for more millions from another
company, one would think that those documents would be very carefully
maintained.

Beyond that, though, is this nagging thought that there SHOULD be multiple
copies of those documents. At least one at the selling company, one at the
buying company, and at least one at each set of involved lawyers.

I also wonder about 'filed' copies with various government agencies. Aside from
whatever copies may be required to be filed with various government agencies
(taxes, etc.). With every document that may be personally important to me in the
future I've paid a minor fee for the county clerk where I live to record the
document.

For example, not long ago I needed a copy of my DD214 (discharge papers from the
USAF) for something, and the easiest way for me to get a copy in short order was
to have the county clerk print one up from their microfilm for a small fee. I'd
originally filed it with them in early 1970, and there was no problem retrieving
it.

Is there ANY chance that such a simple and logical step might have been taken by
either Tarantella or Caldera to ensure the future availability of these
important documents? Just to protect against "flood, fire, and theft"
I would think some sort of "off-site" storage of copies would be
vital...

Is there even, possibly, a requirement that such documents be filed?

Just a thought.

---
Tom
en.gin.eer en-ji-nir n 1: a mechanism for converting caffeine into designs.

[ Reply to This | # ]

Wow, PJ! And a question...
Authored by: Anonymous on Monday, March 29 2004 @ 12:44 AM EST
Not only did the Novell legal team do a beautiful job, but then you take us by the hands and lead us through the gallery, pointing out all the nice brushwork. Thank you very much!

One question has bugged me for a while now, though: 17 USC 204(a) sez

(a) A transfer of copyright ownership, other than by operation of law, is not valid unless an instrument of conveyance... [my emphasis added]
The "writing" requirement is pretty absolute. For instance, the Ninth Circuit will recognize that a transfer has occurred as of agreement at a certain date, without a writing existing on that date, if and only if the parties create a 204(a) conveyance writing afterwards, confirming the original agreement.

As others have pointed out in their comments above, the APA itself explicitly disclaims transfers by operation of law. That is, the parties to the transfer (of whatever), Novell and OldSCO, explicitly agreed not to go with a "transfer by operation of law", leaving only the required writing available to effect transfer. But of course, a judge can overrule that bit of contract language if she feels that equity requires it.

Could that be what (new)SCO is hoping to make happen? Are there any interesting precedents out there where copyright was transferred by operation of law, despite the absence of a 204(a) writing?

[ Reply to This | # ]

Dont think SCO can sue for breach of contract?
Authored by: Peter Smith on Monday, March 29 2004 @ 03:05 AM EST
An earlier poster (Codswallop?) questioned whether SCO could sue for the
transfer of the promised copyrights.

The argument being that Tarantella failed to procure the coyrights from Novell
and that SCO's rights were strictly limited to what Tarantella already possessed
and transferred to SCO.

If so, this would mean that Slander of Title (claiming an implicit transfer of
copyrights) was SCO's only possible course of action and it seems likely this
will fail.

In which case SCO is dead in the water with no copyrights worth speaking of.

[ Reply to This | # ]

More accolades
Authored by: Peter Smith on Monday, March 29 2004 @ 03:17 AM EST
I forgot to include in my previous post my gratitude and admiration for PJ.

Thanks to her I am able to deal with my clients with confidence and certainty
about the future.

I am sure countless others feel like I do.

So, PJ, you have done much more than provide legal insights, you have helped
fuel the growth of the FOSS/Linux phenomen.

[ Reply to This | # ]

OT - Can Baystar Sue SCO?
Authored by: DrHow on Monday, March 29 2004 @ 06:24 AM EST
It seems to me likely that TSG sold the "We own The Unix Operating
System." line to Baystar. In retrospect, it also appears clear that TSG
should have known that it was not so. (Definitely not with respect to trademark
or exclusivity of implementation of the Unix standard; and apparently Novell had
sent them a letter long ago about the copyrights. We also now know that SCO
knew there was none of their System V IP in Linux - ie., that they had to know
that their case against IBM was very weak.) Thus it appears that TSG seriously
misrepresented their assets when they got the additional funding from Baystar.
It seems to me that Baystar should be able to seek some recourse under such
circumstances. It is just curiosity about the principle for me; as, other
factors seeming as they are, I would not expect Baystar to actually take any
action.

[ Reply to This | # ]

PJ: You make it so clear!
Authored by: seeks2know on Monday, March 29 2004 @ 01:47 PM EST

PJ,

Thank you for all of the work that went into this.

When you explain it, everything becomes so clear. I have a newfound appreciation for the lawyers and the legal system.

As someone who enjoys chess, I found your analogy especially enlightening. When I see these documents through the help of your eyes, I can see the positioning, the tactical deployment and the long-term strategies all being played out.

Without your assistance, all I see are events evolving in slow-motion, occasionally interrupted by a high-volume spew of meaningless words on paper.

Thanks so much for your contributions.

---
"The least initial deviation from the truth is multiplied later a thousandfold."
-- Aristotle

[ Reply to This | # ]

Novell's Reply Memorandum in Support of Motion to Dismiss - Annotated -This is no masterpiece
Authored by: Anonymous on Monday, March 29 2004 @ 07:36 PM EST
Please before I get flamed... I am fully a supporter of linux and the FOSS
position. However, The analysis of Novell's reply seems to be missing the
gaping inconsistencies in Novell's response. I'd like to point one of the
glaring ones in my mind, and recommend we all go back and read carefully.
Contrary to what SCO would like, stating something doesn't make it true. Novell
should know better, but I must admin I find them guilty of the same type of
speach which has angered me so at SCO.
I am quoting from the groklaw copies of these documents

Novell:

SCO's opposition brief largely ignores the text of the APA. SCO does not rebut
Novell's textual analysis that the APA, even as amended by Amendment No. 2,
constitutes, at most, a contractual promise to assign, under certain conditions,
certain rights falling under the rubric of "copyright".

They say sco does not rebut:

SCO:
"Contrary to the above law, Novell claims in its Memorandum that Section
204(a) provides draconian requirements of specificity and clarity, and that
written agreements that do not meet Novell's proposed heightened standard are
invalid. Novell has not, however, cited a single case where a writing even
remotely as detailed as the Asset Purchase Agreement as amended has been found
insufficient under Section 204(a). In fact, of the three cases Novell cites in
support of its supposed heightened standard, two did not involve written
agreements. See Effects Assoc., Inc. v. Cohen, 908 F.2d 555, 557 (9th Cir. 1990)
(holding that oral agreement did not meet Section 204(a) requirement of a
"writing") and Konigsberg Intl., Inc. v. Rice, 16 F.3d 355, 356 (9th
Cir. 1994) (same). In the third case Novell cites, Schiller & Schmidt,
Incorporated v. Nordisco Corporation, 969 F.2d 410, 412 (7th Cir. 1992), the
Seventh Circuit held that a basic sales agreement that did not mention the word
"copyright" was sufficient to meet the requirements of Section 204(a).
The court's opinion in Schiller & Schmidt actually supportsSCO's position.

The Asset Purchase Agreement, as amended, is clearly sufficient to meet Section
204(a)'s requirement of a "writing," "note" or
"memorandum."
"

forgive me, but whether it has merit or not... this is clearly a rebuttal. They
openly rebut the claim that the APA is not a transfer according to
Section204(a). They claim the opposite of what Novel claimed, they site case
law, if this isn't a rebuttal what is?

another case

Novell:
"In its opposition, SCO does not dispute core propositions in Novell's
opening brief:


In order to survive a motion to dismiss, SCO must plead facts sufficient to show
the falsity of Novell's statements that copyrights were not transferred.
(Memorandum in Support of Motion to Dismiss ("Opening Br.") at 4.)
"

SCO:
"In considering a motion to dismiss, a court must take the allegations of
the complaint at face value and must construe them favorably to the plaintiff.
The allegations in the plaintiff's complaint are presumed true. Miller v. Glanz,
948 F.2d 1562, 1565 (10th Cir. 1991). A court should not grant a motion to
dismiss unless it appears beyond doubt that the plaintiff could prove no set of
facts supporting the claim which would entitle plaintiff to relief. Huxall v.
First State Bank, 842 F.2d 249, 250- 51 (10th Cir. 1988). The court's function
on a Rule 12(b)(6) motion is merely "to assess whether the plaintiffs
complaint alone is legally sufficient to state a claim for which relief may be
granted." Miller, 948 F.2d at 1565. "
"

That seems a rebuttal to me. Novell says you have to prove falsity to to
"survive" a motion to dismiss. SCO says no I don't... the court must
take what I say at face value at this stage in the game.

I could go on.... but I want the truth and careful, logical analysis at Groklaw.
And remember, Novell is the enemy of my enemy.... and I'm not sure if that
makes them the fried of FOSS. Please no flames, but if I'm missing something
please prove me wrong.

[ Reply to This | # ]

Arachnid
Authored by: mrcreosote on Tuesday, March 30 2004 @ 05:29 AM EST
Just wondering - the problem in Arachnid's case was the fact that the contract
said 'will be assigned'.

Would it have made a difference if it had said 'shall be assigned', or do you
have to be even more specific than that? I.e. what language do you need to
specifically state that all work done by the contractor is automatically the
property of the entity which lets the contract?


---
----------
mrcreosote

[ Reply to This | # ]

So, OldSCO _did_ buy the Brooklyn Bridge
Authored by: Superbiskit on Tuesday, March 30 2004 @ 09:44 PM EST
The APA drew a sharp distinction between the existing Novell UNIX "SVRX" products and new products that SCO was expected to develop in the future. Novell was entitled to a 100% interest in on-going royalties from existing UNIX licensees (with a 5% administrative fee paid back to SCO), and had the power to prohibit SCO from entering into new licenses for SVRX products. (See e.g., APA, Sections 1.2(b), 1.6, 4.16(b).) New products that SCO developed over time, by contrast, would carry much reduced royalty obligations. (See APA at Schedule 1.2(b).)
We haven't addressed this aspect as much as the others. If I assign, say, the rights - including my copyright - in a program I've written, I would not typically retain the right to receive 100% royalties every time you distribute it. Generally speaking, TO SELL the rights means they are no longer mine. If I still am due the royalties it is only because I've only LEASED some rights to you to enable you to distribute what is still my property.

If I owned an apartment house and collected the rents, I might hire a property management firm to receive the rent and perform some maintenance tasks for a percentage thereof - the ownership, and the right to the rents remains mine. If I sell the property, the right to the rents goes unquestionably to the buyer - that is a substantial part of what he is buying.

[ Reply to This | # ]

Novell's Reply Memorandum in Support of Motion to Dismiss - Annotated
Authored by: haegarth on Wednesday, March 31 2004 @ 04:48 PM EST
I refuse to believe that SCO's lawyers are fools.
Still, reading PJ's explainations, I get the picture of some law newbie's work
here.
Either they
- didn't really use experienced lawyers to work on the case (maybe they start to
run out of cash at SCO)
or
- they have realized that they have no chance to win and try their best to bend
the facts

Anyway, the difference in quality between the two legal teams is stunning.

---
Everytime I read SCOspeak I'm dumbfounded...

[ Reply to This | # ]

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