decoration decoration
Stories

GROKLAW
When you want to know more...
decoration
For layout only
Home
Archives
Site Map
Search
About Groklaw
Awards
Legal Research
Timelines
ApplevSamsung
ApplevSamsung p.2
ArchiveExplorer
Autozone
Bilski
Cases
Cast: Lawyers
Comes v. MS
Contracts/Documents
Courts
DRM
Gordon v MS
GPL
Grokdoc
HTML How To
IPI v RH
IV v. Google
Legal Docs
Lodsys
MS Litigations
MSvB&N
News Picks
Novell v. MS
Novell-MS Deal
ODF/OOXML
OOXML Appeals
OraclevGoogle
Patents
ProjectMonterey
Psystar
Quote Database
Red Hat v SCO
Salus Book
SCEA v Hotz
SCO Appeals
SCO Bankruptcy
SCO Financials
SCO Overview
SCO v IBM
SCO v Novell
SCO:Soup2Nuts
SCOsource
Sean Daly
Software Patents
Switch to Linux
Transcripts
Unix Books

Gear

Groklaw Gear

Click here to send an email to the editor of this weblog.


You won't find me on Facebook


Donate

Donate Paypal


No Legal Advice

The information on Groklaw is not intended to constitute legal advice. While Mark is a lawyer and he has asked other lawyers and law students to contribute articles, all of these articles are offered to help educate, not to provide specific legal advice. They are not your lawyers.

Here's Groklaw's comments policy.


What's New

STORIES
No new stories

COMMENTS last 48 hrs
No new comments


Sponsors

Hosting:
hosted by ibiblio

On servers donated to ibiblio by AMD.

Webmaster
Another SCO Declaration From Someone Not Involved in the APA - Troy Keller - Updated 2X
Tuesday, May 29 2007 @ 11:50 AM EDT

Here's another person who wasn't involved in any way in the APA drafting, negotiation or execution who tells us that he concluded it transferred the copyrights, Troy Keller [PDF], at attorney who worked on a later deal. I'd say the hearsay testimony from SCO is about halfway to the moon by now.

Keller was involved, he tells the court, representing Caldera when it purchased Santa Cruz's two divisions in 2000 and 2001, which would be five and six years after the APA, respectively. He didn't have primary responsibility for intellectual property issues in the transaction, but he sat in on many discussion and he and the other lawyers looked over the APA and they "concluded" from reading it that copyrights transferred. Like I say, halfway to the moon, at least.

He says something a little odd, though. He claims that back then, he reviewed the APA and both Amendment 1 and Amendment 2 for Caldera. How come, then, in 2003, nobody at Caldera or at Novell knew about Amendment 2 until a paralegal dug it up from an old file cabinet in June of 2003?

He says something else odd in paragraph 10. He claims the famous clause about Santa Cruz having no knowledge of any fact that would prevent Caldera from registering the rights it acquired except maybe the chain not being provable from Novell meant that there was a question about the location of the copyrights. Unless someone has changed the definition of chain of title, this would be an odd statement to my mind. Here's the famous paragraph, so you can see if it matches logically with what he says or if it matches the concept that there was a problem with the chain of title from Novell:

(v) Assignor has no knowledge of any fact that would prevent Assignor's registration of any Rights related or appurtenant to the Inventions and Works or recording the transfer of Rights hereunder (except that Assignor may not be able to establish a chain of title from Novell, Inc. but shall diligently endeavor to do so as soon as possible); and

Does that sound like it's talking about a warehouse to you? That's where the copyright registrations were kept. Or does it sound like they couldn't prove Novell transfered the copyrights?

He attaches the "Intellectual Property Assignment" document from the 2001 deal between Caldera and Santa Cruz. But a 2001 document between Caldera and Santa Cruz can't tell you what Santa Cruz got from Novell in 1995. It certainly couldn't transfer more than what it got from Novell. And this declarant wasn't there in 1995. So the list doesn't actually tell us anything more than that the lawyers "concluded" that Santa Cruz must have gotten the copyrights, so it listed products on the list. I note, however, that the list has no copyright numbers. That seems very strange indeed. If Santa Cruz really had them, I'd normally expect that they'd list them that way. And if they couldn't find the paperwork, I would expect them to contact the Copyright Office and get the precise list that way. Finally, if you notice, Schedule C's list is titled Assigned Copyrights and Technology. All very odd indeed.

Update: You may wish to compare the copyrights that Novell (and SCO) registered with the US Copyright Office -- the copyrights at issue in the litigation -- with the list on Schedule C. So here is Novell's list.

Here's my explanation, as long as people who were not involved at all can opine. I notice that when SCO went to try to register the copyrights in July of 2003 (you can find all of SCO's copyrights here on our Contracts page), they were mostly still all registered to AT&T or USL. For example, here's the copyright for UNIX System V Release 3.2/386, registered to AT&T. So that tells me that nobody cared a bit about the copyrights, not Novell, not Santa Cruz, not Caldera. Not one of those companies bothered to register. Why?

My guess is because you only need to if you wish to sue somebody, and no one was doing that until SCO Group came along, and they sued IBM without even doing so. It was only after they sued IBM in March of 2003 that they tried to register copyrights, as did Novell soon thereafter. So the legal work looks to me like nobody thought to ask or even much thought about the copyrights. That in turn tells me that no one needed the copyrights to run any of the businesses.

I think Kim Madsen told the truth in her deposition. It never came up. People may have assumed things, on the Santa Cruz side, but that is not enough to transfer the copyrights. Why the Santa Cruz lawyers on the APA deal didn't do that part of the legal transaction to make sure the copyrights transfered is the question mark, but it looks to me like they just didn't, so if I were SCO, that's who I would sue. Maybe that's why they haven't shown up yet. Lawyers, at least, know that to transfer a copyright, you need an instrument of conveyance. With all the witnesses who were not there giving these opinions, that is the missing piece, the piece that if it existed, would negate the need for any of the witnesses.

What is fascinating to me is that when SCO filed for the registrations, it didn't tell the Copyright Office that it had been asking Novell to transfer them over to SCO since late 2002 without success. From what is publicly available at the Copyright Office website, I see no indication of that. I believe that detail is going to come up again later.

Update 2: I just noticed something, thanks to a reader who asked where the definitions section is in the contract attached to this declaration. So I went to take a look, and I noticed that this document references the Caldera-Santa Cruz Reorganization Plan from 2000. That has some interesting consequences.

Let me show you what I mean. First, though, let's look at the language, to my eyes very weak, even squirrely, in the Intellectual Property Assignment. Here is a paragraph from the opening section of the contract, dated May of 2001, the WHEREAS part of the document, called the recitals:

WHEREAS, Assignor has developed, created, written, and/or acquired certain inventions, patent applications, trade secrets, trademarks and trademark applications, designs, products, processes and works of authorship prior to the Effective Date, including but not limited to, the software code, inventions, trade secrets, trademarks and trademark applications designs, products, processes and works of authorship listed in Schedules A-C attached hereto (the "Inventions and Works") (which do not include the Excluded Assets, as defined in the Reorganization Plan, and any intellectual property rights appurtenant thereto;

I emphasized the parts that jumped out at me. First, it says "any" IP rights, not "all," and while it lists every form of IP, such as trademarks, patents and trade secrets, it doesn't name copyrights in the list, except perhaps by inference, which isn't enough in copyright law. And whatever was excluded under the Reorganization Plan remained excluded, it says. So for sure, just out of the gate, we see that some things transferred, but not everything. And in paragraph 1, that is all Assignor says it is transferring, whatever it actually has:

1. Assignment. Assignor hereby assigns, transfers and conveys to Assignee, and Assignee accepts, all of Assignor's right, title, and interest...

There follows the list, but all this says to me is that Santa Cruz was assigning whatever rights it did own. Let's see what Assignor says that amounts to, in the warranty section, where normally you would expect to see language that Assignor warrants that it owns and has the right to transfer the patents, copyrights, etc.:

8. Representations and Warranties. Assignor hereby represents and warrants to Assignee the following:
(i) Assignor has the full power, authority and all rights necessary to transfer and assign Assignor's Rights in the Invention and Works...

(v) Assignor has no knowledge of any fact that would prevent Assignee's registration of any Rights related or appurtenant to the Invention and Works ...(except that Assignor may not be able to establish a chain of title from Novell Inc. but shall diligently endeavor to do so as soon as possible)....

All this says to me is that Assignor, Santa Cruz, was giving Caldera whatever it turned out Santa Cruz actually did get from Novell, whatever rights it turned out to have, at that time not so clearly known or established, but that Santa Cruz would try really hard to get it clarified.

Remember that in the original reorganization deal with Caldera, Santa Cruz retained some rights and some IP. There were Excluded Assets. So what might that be? Here's the definition of "Excluded Assets" in the Reorganization Plan:

(b) Excluded Assets.

(i) Excluded Assets. SCO is not selling and Caldera shall not acquire from SCO any of the following assets or any interest therein (collectively, the "Excluded Assets"):...

(C) those assets set forth on Exhibit 1.4(b).

That is the phantom exhibit that Caldera didn't file with the SEC in a form you can access digitally anyway, and so IBM asked SCO to provide the missing materials. If you go to the linked article, you will see on the chart, number 10, that SCO said it would look for it. Presumably IBM has it now, but I don't seem to find it, or at least not this second. So this is to mark the place where that missing exhibit goes, when we have it. If you recall seeing it mentioned, please let me know. Anyway, there were exclusions. So without a list, how can anyone know if any copyrights actually transferred, or if they did which? One of the exclusions in the initial Reorganization was OpenServer. We can see that from this 2000 Q&A regarding the deal, filed with the SEC:

1. What was announced?

Caldera Systems, Inc. has reached a definitive agreement to acquire the assets of the Server Software Division (SSD), and Professional Services Division of The Santa Cruz Operation, Inc. (SCO). A new company, Caldera, Inc., will be formed, combining the assets of Caldera Systems with the assets acquired from SCO.

2. What part of the Server Software Division is included in the deal?

Employees, the UNIX and related intellectual properties, including UnixWare, facilities, legal entities, customer relationships, channel relationships and all products except for OpenServer intellectual property rights (IP). Some of the Tarantella support personnel will move to the Tarantella Division. Caldera, Inc. will act as SCO's exclusive sales representative with respect to sales and support of SCO OpenServer, and will receive commissions for such service. Caldera, Inc. will have exclusive distribution rights of SCO OpenServer.

So, originally, the idea was to have Santa Cruz retain ownership of OpenServer, while Caldera sold it for them and provided support, as you can see spelled out in this filing, a letter to the two companies' employees:

SCO will retain its Tarantella Division, and the SCO OpenServer revenue stream and intellectual properties.

Further, this is Caldera's account, and Novell has raised some questions about their alleged "joint press release" about the deal, but in any case my point is that while there was a later deal, the IP assignment document references the first deal's document, and that first deal didn't transfer everything by a long shot.

Remember that in 2000, Ralph Yarro and Canopy were involved in this deal, as the 8K dated August 2, 2000 tells us:

On August 1, 2000, Caldera Systems, Inc. ("Caldera"), Cyclone, Inc. ("Newco"), and The Santa Cruz Operation, Inc. ("SCO") entered into an Agreement and Plan of Reorganization (the "Acquisition Agreement"). As a result of the acquisition (the "Acquisition"), SCO will receive a 28% interest of Caldera, Inc., which is estimated to be an aggregate of approximately 17.54 million shares of Caldera stock (including approximately 2 million shares reserved for employee options assumed by Caldera for options currently held by SCO employees joining Caldera), and $7 million in cash. In conjunction with the Acquisition, The Canopy Group, Inc., a major stockholder of Caldera, has agreed to loan $18 million to SCO....

The foregoing description of the Acquisition Agreement and the transactions contemplated thereby do not purport to be complete and are qualified in their entirety by reference to the Acquisition Agreement and the Voting Agreements, copies of which will be filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission at a later date in an appropriate filing.

All stockholders should read the joint proxy statement/prospectus concerning the Merger that will be filed with the SEC and mailed to stockholders. The joint proxy statement/prospectus will contain important information that stockholders should consider before making any decision regarding the Acquisition....

Caldera and certain other persons named below may be deemed to be participants in the solicitation of proxies of Caldera stockholders to adopt and approve the Acquisition Agreement, to approve the Acquisition and to approve the issuance of Newco Common Stock. The participants in this solicitation may include the directors of Caldera (Ransom H. Love, Ralph J. Yarro III, Dale R. Boyd, John R. Egan, Edward E. Iacobucci, Raymond J. Noorda, Thomas P. Raimondi, Jr. and Steve Cakebread) and the officers of Caldera (Ransom H. Love, Chief Executive Officer and President, Alan J. Hansen, Chief Financial Officer, Drew A. Spencer, Chief Technology Officer, Richard C. Rife, Vice President and General Counsel, Royce D. Bybee, Senior Vice President of Sales and Marketing, Benoy Tamang, Vice President of Business Development, R. Dean Taylor, Vice President of Marketing, Darren Davis, Vice President of Engineering, John Thomas, Vice President of Support Services and Walter D. Hammond, Vice President of Operations and Information Systems. The aforementioned directors and officers of Caldera, as a group, may be deemed to beneficially own approximately 89.1% of Caldera's outstanding common stock or securities convertible into common stock.

At the time, Caldera Systems, Inc. was a Linux company, and so in the press release, Caldera listed what it had open sourced:

Caldera Systems is a leader in--and supporter of--the Open Source movement. Please visit www.openlinux.org to download Caldera Systems' technologies that have been open-sourced--including but not limited to--LIZARD, Caldera Open Administration System (COAS), Webmin, OpenSLP, the NetWare Kernel File System (NKFS) and the OpenLinux 2.2 port for Sun's SPARC(TM) and UltraSPARC(TM)-based platforms....

Caldera Systems, Inc. (Nasdaq: CALD) is a "Linux for eBusiness" technology leader in developing and marketing successful Linux-based business solutions, including its award-winning OpenLinux, NetWare for Linux, Linux technical training, certification and support--with free 30-day phone support and on-site consulting. Caldera OpenLearning Providers offer exceptional distribution-neutral Linux training and certification based on Linux Professional Institute (LPI(TM)) certification standards. Caldera Systems supports the open source community and iS a leader in, and advocate of Linux Standard Base (LSB(TM)) and LPI(TM).

That was then. Now it would like to sue your pants off for using Linux or contributing to it. Note however that back then it was a "leader in, and advocate of, Linux Standard Base (LSB)". Note what Santa Cruz is described as owning in that press release:

SCO, The Santa Cruz Operation, the SCO logo, the Tarantella logo, Tarantella, UnixWare, and SCO OpenServer are trademarks or registered trademarks of The Santa Cruz Operation, Inc. in the USA and other countries. UNIX is a registered trademark of The Open Group in the US and other countries. All other brand or product names are or may be trademarks of, and are used to identify products or services of, their respective owners.

So they knew that the UNIX trademark was not theirs. It had gone to the Open Group from Novell already. So again, although the IP assignment has an impressive sounding list, it can't be everything. Now note the definition of "Intellectual Property Rights" in the Reorganization agreement:

"Intellectual Property Rights" means, collectively, all of the following worldwide intangible legal rights including those existing or acquired by ownership, license or other legal operation, whether or not filed, perfected, registered or recorded and whether now or hereafter existing, filed, issued or acquired: (i) patents, patent applications, and patent rights, including any and all continuations, continuations-in-part, divisions, reissues, reexaminations or extensions thereof; (ii) inventions (whether patentable or not in any country), invention disclosures, industrial designs, improvements, trade secrets, proprietary information, know-how, technology and technical data; (iii) rights associated with works of authorship (including without limitation audiovisual works), including without limitation copyrights, copyright applications and copyright registrations, moral rights, database rights, mask work rights, mask work applications and mask work registrations; (iv) rights in trade secrets (including without limitation rights in industrial property, customer, vendor and prospect lists and all associated information or databases and other confidential or proprietary information), and all rights relating to the protection of the same including without limitation rights under nondisclosure agreements; (v) any other proprietary rights in technology, including software, all source and object code, algorithms, architecture, structure, display screens, layouts, inventions, development tools and all documentation and media constituting, describing or relating to the above, including, without limitation, manuals, memoranda, records, business information, or trade marks, trade dress or names, anywhere in the world; (vi) any rights analogous to those set forth in the preceding clauses and any other proprietary rights relating to intangible property, including without limitation brand names, trademarks, service marks, domain names, trademark and service mark registrations and applications therefor, trade names, rights in trade dress and packaging and all goodwill associated with the same; and (vii) all rights to sue or make any claims for any past, present or future infringement, misappropriation or unauthorized use of any of the foregoing rights and the right to all income, royalties, damages and other payments that are now or may hereafter become due or payable with respect to any of the foregoing rights, including without limitation damages for past, present or future infringement, misappropriation or unauthorized use thereof; and (viii) rights under license agreements for the foregoing.

I marked the nuggets I see, particularly the fact that the document seems to support Novell's position regarding a license being sufficient to run a business, because the contract mentions license agreements conveying rights. Also it says Caldera would get the right to sue. Remember Darl mentioning that, when the copyright issue of ownership first came up, that at least they for sure had the right to sue? And I read the contract that way too. And that is where I think SCO read this agreement and say, Oh, goody. We have the right to sue.

But over what? Only over whatever Santa Cruz had to transfer. We already see that Novell didn't transfer everything to Santa Cruz. Open Group got the UNIX trademark, for example. So that brings up the question, what else didn't Santa Cruz get? And of course, Novell says it didn't get patents, which SCO concedes, and Novell points to the clause that says that copyrights were excluded from the Novell deal, while SCO has collected all sorts of passersby to say they thought SCO was getting the copyrights. But in copyright law, you need more than thoughts, desires, hopes, dreams and assumptions.

Also Novell asserts that it retained a right to waive, of course, but I think Darl is correct in saying that they got the right to sue, subject to that Novell veto, if Novell establishes that right, which I expect them to.

But it all depends on what was excluded all down the line, starting with AT&T. For example, just for fun, ask yourself this: what copyrights did AT&T have available to transfer, post the BSDi case? Remember what a mess their copyright situation turned out to be in that litigation? It could only sell to Novell what it had to sell. Then Novell only could sell, if it wanted to, what it had gotten from AT&T (plus whatever copyrights it had on code it had developed); and in turn it could retain, sell parts of its rights, license certain rights, etc. Even the right to sue would be subject to that qualification.

And here's the Third Amendment to the Reorganization agreement's changes to the Excluded Assets section:

4. Section 1.4(b)(i)(B) is hereby amended by adding the following phrase to the end of such section:

", except for rights associated with the Commit Transaction Receivables"

5. Section 1.4(b)(i) is hereby amended by adding the following sentence to the end of such section:

Notwithstanding Sections 1.4(b)(i)(A)-(C), Newco's continued use of certain Excluded Assets as part of UnixWare and OpenServer, and sale of certain unbundled and bundled products including certain Excluded Assets, is set forth in Exhibit 1.4(b)(i).

So that seems to indicate at least the important exclusions, or at least it hints at them. And obviously Caldera was able to use "excluded assets" it didn't own in its products, so I guess it is possible to sell software that includes code you don't own the copyrights to. Ahem.

This Keller declaration, as I read it, is saying that they had trouble with establishing the chain of title, however one defines it, and that would indicate that someone at some point had to get proof that the copyrights had transfered or that Novell was now willing to do so, neither of which I have seen. Look what the Reorganization Plan has in the Excluded Assets section:

(e) Unassignable Assets. Notwithstanding any other provision of this Agreement or any of the Ancillary Agreements, to the extent that any of the Contributed Assets are not assignable or otherwise transferable by the Contributing Companies to Newco without the consent, approval or waiver of another party thereto or any third party (including any governmental agency), or if such assignment or transfer would constitute a breach thereof or of any other material contract binding upon the transferor or any of its Affiliates, or a violation of any applicable law, then neither this Agreement nor such Ancillary Agreements shall constitute an assignment or transfer (or an attempted assignment or transfer) thereof until such consent, approval or waiver of such party or parties has been duly obtained.

With respect to each such Contributed Asset whose assignment or transfer to Newco requires the consent, approval or waiver of another party thereto or any third party, Newco and SCO shall cooperate and use their mutual reasonable, commercial efforts to obtain such consent, approval or waiver of such other party or parties or such third party to such assignment or transfer as promptly as practicable prior to the Effective Time; and each agrees to supply relevant information to such party or parties or such third party in order to facilitate such objective. Notwithstanding the foregoing, nothing contained herein shall obligate Newco or any Contributing Company to expend or pay any amount to third parties to obtain any consents, approvals or waivers, or to make alternative arrangements available; provided that where the Contributing Companies are unable to effectively assign or otherwise transfer to Newco nor any Contributed Asset without constituting a breach due to such lack of third party consent, the Contributing Companies shall make available to Newco the net economic benefits (such as inbound royalty payments, net of actual costs), if any, received by the Contributing Companies from and after the Effective Time with respect to any such Contributed Asset.

Does that sound to you like the parties knew there was a problem? It does to me. And I read it that they agreed that unless it could establish the full chain of title, for which it needed Novell's permission and agreement, the copyrights wouldn't transfer. What else could that paragraph mean? Maybe you can see something I am missing, but this is a big red flag to me. And does it sound like the problem was trying to locate the physical copyright registrations? Would you need permission of Novell for that? I don't think that story matches this clause very well.

And look at the definition of "Contributed Assets":

"Contributed Assets" shall mean those assets, including real property assets, that are owned, leased or licensed by the Contributing Companies that are (a) listed on Exhibit 13.15A attached hereto, (b) Intellectual Property Rights used in the production, development, support or marketing of the Group Products, or (c) used in the Group Business, and (d) all Contributed Contracts to which any of the Contributing Companies is a party, but in all cases excluding the Excluded Assets.

Assets include real property, it says, like the building where the copyrights were kept, presumably, that are owned, leased or licensed and IP rights used in "the production, development, support or marketing" of the "Group Products". Do you need copyrights to do any of those things, assuming you have a license? Here's the definition of "Copyright Assignment":

"Copyright Assignment" means a form of assignment mutually acceptable to Caldera and SCO assigning all copyrights included in the Contributed Assets.

Well, it also needed to be acceptable to the Copyright Office. That's the part that didn't seem to get done. But here we see that at least these lawyers knew you needed a clear assignment by a written conveyance, but only for "Contributed Assets" and only, of course, whatever Santa Cruz itself owned, which Novell says is nothing in the way of copyrights, except for any new code Santa Cruz had itself developed.

Caldera sent its partners a letter also, dated August 2, 2000 and filed with the SEC, and in it, it called Linux "the wave of the future":

One of the greatest benefits the customers of the new Caldera will now enjoy is a full product spectrum. This array of world class products, which no other company has today, will be tightly coupled with strong Professional Services and Support organizations to create the reality of the Open Internet Platform. The combination of Linux, the wave of the future, with Unix's history of providing literally thousands of serious, fully developed business applications, gives Caldera customers a trusted path to the future.

UNIX is also well established as an enterprise platform -- a system that allows service to either a centrally located or broadly disbursed customer base. The Linux/UNIX combination provides a full-range migration path from the desktop to the enterprise.

Obviously, at the time, the focus was on Linux, and so SCO's current story that it was only IBM that made Linux a realistic operating system for business or that it was a UNIX company, blindsided by IBM contributing to Linux, which allegedly they did in a plot to ruin Caldera's Unix business, is obvious poppycock, judging from these words alone. Caldera planned to merge them itself, so any contributions IBM made to Linux would benefit its business back then, and certainly IBM had every reason to take Caldera at its word as to what business it thought it was in. Here are the headers of another press release Caldera released the same day and then filed with the SEC:

ON AUGUST 2, 2000, CALDERA SYSTEMS, INC., A DELAWARE CORPORATION ("CALDERA"), AND THE SANTA CRUZ OPERATION, INC., A CALIFORNIA CORPORATION ("SCO"), JOINTLY ISSUED THE FOLLOWING PRESS RELEASE:

CALDERA SYSTEMS TO ACQUIRE SCO SERVER SOFTWARE AND PROFESSIONAL SERVICES DIVISIONS, PROVIDING WORLD'S LARGEST LINUX /UNIX CHANNEL

Offers First Open Internet Platform, Embracing Open Access to Linux and UNIX Technologies

Now imagine yourself IBM back on that date. Would you imagine in a million years that helping Linux improve was going to harm Caldera in any way? Here's what Caldera said about the merger of Linux and UNIX:

The new company will offer the industry's first comprehensive Open Internet Platform (OIP) combining Linux and UNIX server solutions and services globally. The OIP provides commercial customers and developers with a single platform that can scale from the thinnest of clients to the clustering needs of the largest data center....

By the way, as I was plodding through the various filings in 2000, I came across this document, dated July of 2000, so just before the Reorganization Plan, whereby Caldera declared that it would find a number of ways to incentivize its executives and board with stock options of various kinds, and nestled in that document is this missing link, which explains finally how it came to be that Caldera, when it sued Microsoft, ended up with money going to Canopy instead:

Ralph J. Yarro, III and Raymond J. Noorda were directors of Caldera, Inc. until Caldera, Inc. was merged into its parent, The Canopy Group, Inc. ("CANOPY"), during fiscal 2000. Until such merger, Caldera, Inc. was majority-owned by Canopy which holds more than 5% of the Common Stock. The Noorda Family Trust, of which Mr. Noorda and his spouse are co-trustees, is the controlling stockholder of Canopy.

And that explains how Canopy had the authority to direct the court to get rid of the documents from that litigation. It's a fascinating document. Not being a stock guru, I had never heard of Phantom Stock, but it sounds like a great deal if you can get it. And there is an elaborate dance of stock between various Canopy companies and Canopy itself, which is way over my head, but I see John Egan and Egan Capital mentioned as one of the directors of Lineo, which in turn ended up being partially owned by Caldera. MTI is in there too, with Thomas P. Raimondi an officer of MTI, which had more than 5% of the outstanding Caldera stock, and in turn Canopy held 45% of "the outstanding common stock of MTI." Anyway, those of you who are stock gurus may find it of interest.

I'm going to bump this article to the top now, from its original posting on Saturday, because I did a lot of work, and I don't want you to miss it.


  


Another SCO Declaration From Someone Not Involved in the APA - Troy Keller - Updated 2X | 191 comments | Create New Account
Comments belong to whoever posts them. Please notify us of inappropriate comments.
Corrections
Authored by: Simon G Best on Saturday, May 26 2007 @ 03:35 AM EDT

Corrections here, please, if there are any :-)

---
"Public relations" is a public relations term for propaganda.

[ Reply to This | # ]

Off-Topic
Authored by: Simon G Best on Saturday, May 26 2007 @ 03:41 AM EDT

Off-topic stuff here, please.

  • See the "Clickable links" example below the comment box for how to do links.

  • Don't forget to choose "HTML Formatted" for the "Post Mode" if doing links (and the like).

  • And, if including links, please give at least a brief summary of what the link leads to. Thanks :-)

  • Oh, and previewing your comments before submitting them is always a good idea :-)

:-)

---
"Public relations" is a public relations term for propaganda.

[ Reply to This | # ]

Another person the Trustee can sue
Authored by: Anonymous on Saturday, May 26 2007 @ 04:43 AM EDT
Why this attorney would place him self in at risk, by admitting he was
responsible for the due diligence of the Santa Cruz to Caldera International
deal is surprising when Santa Cruz attorneys knew by the clear language of
the agreement they exercised they did not have the copyrights.

Why else would their be a clause about unclear title and make reasonable
attempts to acquire them from Novell.

And this is from an attorney, gives one pause about the skill and quality of
the professions.

[ Reply to This | # ]

SCO Currency?
Authored by: jmc on Saturday, May 26 2007 @ 06:01 AM EDT
I get the feeling that SCO/BS&F think that if you produce 100 completely
hearsay declarations this makes one solid piece of evidence.

It seems to me that all Kimball is going to say is that there is no actual piece
of paper that transfers the copyrights from Novell to Santa Cruz, it can't be
the APA as that explicitly excludes copyrights, so Novell still hold them QED
and goodbye. Oh and goodbye IBM case too. And hello top of desk I'd forgotten
what you looked like.

[ Reply to This | # ]

Last minute ambush stuff - yawn.
Authored by: SilverWave on Saturday, May 26 2007 @ 06:28 AM EDT
When the bad guys are so predictable ;)

---
Linus
The bulk of all patents are [bad]...
Spending time reading them is stupid...

Moglen
I can change the rules...
The coupons have no expiration date..

[ Reply to This | # ]

Another SCO Declaration From Someone Not Involved in the APA - Troy Keller
Authored by: blacklight on Saturday, May 26 2007 @ 06:45 AM EDT
SCOG doesn't lie: SCOG lies by omission, fabrication, and self-serving
distortion. I don't know what SCOG's blizzard of motions throughout the years
actually achieved, except gumming up the court proceedings. Whatever SCOG is
trying to achieve, I do expect that the trial itself will be short and sweet
because most if not all of the PSJs will be disposed of in SCOG's disfavor right
up to the eve of the trial.

I liken SCOG's legal tactics to a speeding, reckless driver who is trying to get
from City A to City B by driving all over the road including on and off the
road, in total and blatant disregard for the provisions of the Road Code
(Federal Rules of Procedure, judges' rulings, etc.), and cutting off anyone who
gets in the way (RedHat, the Open Source community, etc.)


---
Know your enemies well, because that's the only way you are going to defeat
them. And know your friends even better, just in case they become your enemies.

[ Reply to This | # ]

Caldera's 10-Q?
Authored by: GLJason on Saturday, May 26 2007 @ 08:55 AM EDT
It's amazing to me that these copyrights, which SCO now contends are their most valuable asset, aren't listed in the 10-Q from the sale of assets to Caldera. Of the around $100 million purchase price, about $26.7 million was for the distribution channel and about $66 million was "goodwill", how accountants record a premium paid for assets over the actual value. Only $5.8 (million was recorded for "Existing technology (consisting primarily of UnixWare and OpenServer)". I think Novell should subpoena the accountants that put together this document and ask them why they didn't list Unix copyrights. SCO contends they are worth more than the $66 million at least so there shouldn't have been any "goodwill" item at all. At the very least such a valuable asset should have been listed. I think the SEC should look into why this valuable asset was hidden from them.

[ Reply to This | # ]

How do I get a piece of the action?
Authored by: justjeff on Saturday, May 26 2007 @ 09:35 AM EDT
I wonder if it would be worth it for me to try to get a piece of this action?
After all, I wasn't involved with the Novell - Santa Cruz transaction or the
APA either. I was, however, in the Unix industry. I noticed the sale of Unix
from AT&T to Novell to Santa Cruz with dismay. I'm sure I had some thoughts
on the matter at the time. With skillful lawyers asking leading questions, I'm
sure I can recall what those thoughts were.

Plus, I'll be memorialized on GL. People will start poking around my past and
probably dredge up stuff I've long forgotten. My own mini-biography...

On second thought, maybe I'll just leave well enough alone...

[ Reply to This | # ]

How much is this about establishing the plausibility of the lawsuit?
Authored by: Anonymous on Saturday, May 26 2007 @ 11:05 AM EDT

The audience for these declarations may not be inside the case itself. These declarations amount to hearsay of a vague contract interpretation many years after the fact. They can't possibly be valid in the context of the case.

The declarations could be about establishing the plausibility of the lawsuit. If BSF can show it had a reasonable basis to launch the lawsuit, then they can avoid sanctions. Additionally, SCO can avoid a counter suits about vexatious litigation. The declarations serve as evidence that BSF and SCO could reasonably have been believed that SCO has the copyrights. As such, they had valid reason to launch a lawsuit ...

[ Reply to This | # ]

Y'know - this kinda reminds me of...
Authored by: jbeadle on Saturday, May 26 2007 @ 11:37 AM EDT
...wrangling over what's actually being transferred via a quitclaim deed. I can transfer to any of you (and would be delighted to do so for the proper consideration) all the right, title and interest I have in anything, like say the very building in Lindon that houses The SCO Group.

It may or may not turn out that I have absolutely zero right, title, or interest in their building. But that would be part of your due diligence, no?

Seems to me that perhaps oldSCO may have just been transferring (at tSCOg's request) whatever IP (arrgh - there's that acronym again) they did have. Which may or may not have been some or all of the copyrights. Or absolutely nothing at all...

-jb

[ Reply to This | # ]

PJ hits the nail on the head
Authored by: Anonymous on Saturday, May 26 2007 @ 06:27 PM EDT
That in turn tells me that no one needed the copyrights to run any of the businesses.
And APA Amendment 2 transferred all of the copyrights necessary for the conduct of business. That is, NONE. No one noticed this until 2003.
In order to sue, they would need to have the copyrights.
Darl asked for them in 2003. Novell said no.
I have not noticed this argument in any filings IBM or NOVELL.
Can somebody show me the way?

[ Reply to This | # ]

Another SCO Declaration From Someone Not Involved in the APA - Troy Keller
Authored by: Anonymous on Saturday, May 26 2007 @ 07:08 PM EDT
All of this APA 2 and 'found, lost or strayed' strikes me as so wrong. I just
cannot help feeling that a document that was so crucial to the transfer of the
copyrights, it must be as they had to go back and re-negotiate for it, was
treated so lightly. This is part of the core existence of the business. Proof of
ownership. That would be kept in a very safe place along with the very documents
that call the company into existence.

Why would they be so careless.

It don't sound right.

It smells like a whole sewer full of rats.

Tufty

[ Reply to This | # ]

Another SCO Declaration From Someone Not Involved in the APA - Troy Keller
Authored by: Anonymous on Monday, May 28 2007 @ 12:32 PM EDT
Reading the Keller Declaration and especially the attached appendix thereto
which contains the contract from old SCO to Caldera conveying the rights that
old-SCO held, I'm struck that the "definitions" section to the
contract, which would specify what exactly the defined terms were intended to
mean, is NOT attached to the declaration by BSF.

Hmmm. That means that the Judge isn't supposed to be curious as to what
"Works" was defined to mean. for example?

Without the definitions provided, there is very incomplete understanding as to
what the parties intended, and especially incomplete understanding to the
manner in which old-SCO was hedging their bets and conveying ONLY what they
really owned.

I smell a rat -- and I don't think that Novell or the Judge will let BSF get
away with this.

[ Reply to This | # ]

Why did nobody register all those copyrights?
Authored by: Anonymous on Monday, May 28 2007 @ 11:17 PM EDT
"Here's my explanation, as long as people who were not involved at all can
opine. I notice that when SCO went to try to register the copyrights in July of
2003 (you can find all of SCO's copyrights here on our Contracts page), they
were mostly still all registered to AT&T or USL. For example, here's the
copyright for UNIX System V Release 3.2/386, registered to AT&T. So that
tells me that nobody cared a bit about the copyrights, not Novell, not Santa
Cruz, not Caldera. Not one of those companies bothered to register. Why?"

I have absolutely no inside knowledge, but I see another plausible explanation
for this, besides the fact that none of these companies seemed to want to sue
anyone. It is the following:

Could it be that in fact the copyrights were not transferred lock, stock, and
barrel from AT&T to USL? Or that they were nin fact not transferred lock,
stock, and barrel from USL to Novell?

Or yet another plausible explanation. Could it be that Novell wanted peace and
quiet to enjoy its acquisition, instead of perpetuating the fight with the
University of California Board of Regents? I could imagine that to try to claim
to copyright practically anything related to UNIX could have caused a lot of
extra and unneeded trouble for whatever party or entity would have tried back in
those days, to do so. In other words, perhaps the copyrights were not filed in
order to avoid lawsuits, in addition to the fact that copyrights would have been
good for nothing, unless someone intended to sue over them.

[ Reply to This | # ]

Another SCO Declaration From Someone Not Involved in the APA - Troy Keller
Authored by: Anonymous on Monday, May 28 2007 @ 11:22 PM EDT
Keller was involved, he tells the court, representing Caldera when it purchased Santa Cruz's two divisions in 2000 and 2001, which would be five and six years after the APA, respectively. He didn't have primary responsibility for intellectual property issues in the transaction, but he sat in on many discussion and he and the other lawyers looked over the APA and they "concluded" from reading it that copyrights transferred.
Perhaps, The SCO Group might be able to sue oldSCO for misrepresentation at sale? After all, this is sounding like oldSCO might have told them they had the copyrights even though they didn't...thus Caldera/The SCO Group might have thought they bought the copyrights, even though they couldn't...which could have lead to this whole mess...

But...then you quote:
(v) Assignor has no knowledge of any fact that would prevent Assignor's registration of any Rights related or appurtenant to the Inventions and Works or recording the transfer of Rights hereunder (except that Assignor may not be able to establish a chain of title from Novell, Inc. but shall diligently endeavor to do so as soon as possible); and
Which just might protect oldSCO from The SCO Group and any nasty lawsuits that might come up, no?

[ Reply to This | # ]

The Appendix (Assignment) conveys NOTHING
Authored by: Anonymous on Tuesday, May 29 2007 @ 01:37 AM EDT
Fascinating to see the attachment to this Declaration, which provides (to my
eyes for the first time) the assignment of rights from Santa Cruz to Caldera –
and to read what it DOESN’T SAY and DOESN’T CONVEY.

From the Recitals intro section:

Santa Cruz only claims to own “certain” rights in (laundry list of items). In a
contract, “certain” means “some but not all” of the rights.

Caldera is stated, in the recitals, as being “desirous” of obtaining “all” of
the rights.

Desire is a fine thing, but desiring all of something, when the other party is
only offering ‘certain’ of something, doesn’t get you “all”.

Paragraph 1: Assignment

To underscore, Assignor (Santa Cruz) only assigns all of “assignor’s rights”
(which are, as we said, certain rights, but not all of the rights), not “all of
the rights” of ownership. The long laundry list of potential rights to potential
things looks impressive, but it is all included in a lengthy dependent clause
attached to the “hedge words’ that Santa Cruz is only assigning them,
effectively, IF AND TO THE EXTENT that Santa Cruz owns them.

To cross check, it’s always useful, at this point, to see what Santa Cruz
WARRANTED what they own – so let’s look at the warranties.

Paragraph 8:

Ah, yes, the very first item – but wait, Santa Cruz only warrants that they have
the right to assign the “Assignor’s Rights” in the Inventions and Works. !!!
That means that Santa Cruz is warranting only that, IF they might own any
rights, that they have the corporate authority to assign them to Caldera!!

So – that’s really not a warranty that they own anything either. So they sold
Caldera – whatever they did own, but they don’t specify, or state categorically,
or warrant. Hmmm.

Interesting that under paragraph 6, “Moral Rights”, Santa Cruz promises that
“any” (!!!) assignment of copyright includes moral rights. Any? Yes, that means
that “certain” might just mean “none at all”.

LEXLAW

[ Reply to This | # ]

Another SCO Declaration From Someone Not Involved in the APA - Troy Keller
Authored by: Anonymous on Tuesday, May 29 2007 @ 11:54 AM EDT
Troy Keller must have skipped class in law school on a lot of very important
days, and BSF serves up his ignorance in this declaration.

In para 3 of his declaration we learn that he represents Caldera. That's fine.

In para 6, he says that he decided, after discussions with Santa Cruz (the
'other side', remember, in this transaction, who have no obligation to
"help" Mr Keller through his misconceptions) that Santa Cruz had, in
Keller's words, "the ownership, right, and authority to transfer the
ownership of those copyrights.."

But -- the assignment agreement he helped draft doesn't actually SAY that. In
it, Santa Cruz only represents that they have the corporate authority to
transfer whatever they MAY own -- they don't rep or warrant that they 'own'
anything. Keller was OUTGAMED by Santa Cruz' lawyers, and he didn't know it then
and he still doesn't know it. BSF knows he's been had, too, and hopes that
nobody will notice.

In para 9, Keller unwittingly admits that he allowed Santa Cruz' lawyers draft
the doc, and then shows that he doesn't know how to read what those Santa Cruz
lawyers actually wrote. Keller paraphrases the writing and interprets that Santa
Cruz warranted that it had the "rights" to Unix, but Santa Cruz
warranted nothing at all of the sort -- they only warranted that they had the
"authority" (from the Santa Cruz Board) to transfer whatever rights
they MAY have had -- which could be nothing.

In para 10, Keller over-reads the language of the Assignment agreement again.
Santa Cruz says it "knows nothing" -- alarms should have been going
off already -- that would prevent Caldera from registering THE RIGHTS THEY GOT
CONVEYED from Santa Cruz -- which, again, could be no rights at all, but there
are no impediments to registering the rights that may not exist. What Keller
doesn't get is that Santa Cruz has its fingers crossed in every paragraph, and
Keller was too dim to see it.

Par 11 is an embarrassment -- with Keller believing, in a sense, that the Santa
Cruz lawyers had some kind of affirmative obligation to educate Keller as to
what he was agreeing to on Caldera's behalf.
Well, that's a novel approach (smirk*) to lawyering, one that I'm sadly not
familiar with, and I do a LOT of contract negotiations.

LEXLAW



[ Reply to This | # ]

Another SCO Declaration From Someone Not Involved in the APA - Troy Keller - Updated 2X
Authored by: tknarr on Tuesday, May 29 2007 @ 12:34 PM EDT

You know, the transfer, especially the part about not being able to prove the chain of title but will diligently attempt to correct that, sounds an awful lot like the guy on the corner selling that brand-new Lexus. The price is really good, almost unbelievably good. The car's in great shape, almost brand-new. All you have to do is sign the bill of sale, give him the money and take the car. Title? Well, he doesn't actually have the title with him. In fact, he's not quite sure where it is. It's probably in one of the drawers in his desk, he'll have to look for it. He promises to look real hard, but there's no need to hold everything up over that technicality. You give him the money, you take the car, and when he finally finds the title he'll send it to you. And you have to admit, it's a really nice car and a really good price...

Of course, if you take his deal, you know the next part involves the DMV telling you that he didn't really own the car at all, and you're going to have to deal with a lot of paperwork and hassle. Oh, and you don't get to keep the car.

[ Reply to This | # ]

The USL trademark
Authored by: belzecue on Tuesday, May 29 2007 @ 01:13 PM EDT
"...when SCO went to try to register the copyrights in July of 2003 (you can find all of SCO's copyrights here on our Contracts page), they were mostly still all registered to AT&T or USL..."

Yep. And a year later they figured they could make a grab for the USL trademark to bolster their copyright claims.

[ Reply to This | # ]

AT&T owns the Copyrights?
Authored by: Anonymous on Tuesday, May 29 2007 @ 01:15 PM EDT
You may wish to compare the copyrights that Novell (and SCO) registered with the
US Copyright Office -- the copyrights at issue in the litigation -- with the
list on Schedule C. So here is Novell's list.
Here's my explanation, as long as people who were not involved at all can opine.
I notice that when SCO went to try to register the copyrights in July of 2003
(you can find all of SCO's copyrights here on our Contracts page), they were
mostly still all registered to AT&T or USL.
>>>
You may wish to compare the copyrights that Novell (and SCO) registered with the
US Copyright Office -- the copyrights at issue in the litigation -- with the
list on Schedule C. So here is Novell's list.
Here's my explanation, as long as people who were not involved at all can opine.
I notice that when SCO went to try to register the copyrights in July of 2003
(you can find all of SCO's copyrights here on our Contracts page), they were
mostly still all registered to AT&T or USL.
<<<
See if I have this correct.

Copyrights are register to the owner of the copyright.
If the copyright registration did not change then the ownership did not change.
If the ownership did not change then AT&T still owns the copyright as they
did not transfer to Novel.
Novel did not sell the copyright to Santa Cruze Operations because Santa Cruze
Operation did not have enough money to buy them and because Novel did not own
the copyrights in a contract that exempts all copyright transfers.
Santa Cruze Operation sold what copyrights Santa Cruze Operation owned to
Caldara but both Caldara and Santa Cruze Operation both agree that Santa Cruze
Operations did not have the Unix copyrights hence Caldara which has now became
The SCO Group request to Novel to transfer the copyrights which Novel declines
to do.
Based on this logic The SCO Group owns ALL Unix copyrights.

[ Reply to This | # ]

Another SCO Declaration From Someone Not Involved in the APA - Troy Keller - Updated 2X
Authored by: belzecue on Tuesday, May 29 2007 @ 01:21 PM EDT
Ye gods. Today, people are going shorting crazy over SCOX (up 44% now). I just hope this doesn't give McBride et al a chance to offload their incentive stock for profit.

[ Reply to This | # ]

Another SCO Declaration From Someone Not Involved in the APA - Troy Keller - Updated 2X
Authored by: Anonymous on Tuesday, May 29 2007 @ 03:02 PM EDT
That's right, if a ton of folks are looking at
the number of filings, the new product announcements,
and so on, and determining as a consequence that
there is a significant upside risk, all those
funds that went short at $5 are cashing in quick.

On the other side (like me), the price has been too
low to be worth the margin to back a short. Drive it
up, please, so it's worth shorting again!

[ Reply to This | # ]

I used to like(....) but...
Authored by: jog on Tuesday, May 29 2007 @ 03:36 PM EDT
Read here and *do* read the comments.

http://weblog.infoworld.com/openresource/
archives/2007/05/sco_was_microso.html

jog

[ Reply to This | # ]

Wow! talk about a stock jump!
Authored by: Anonymous on Tuesday, May 29 2007 @ 05:21 PM EDT
SCO's stock is up to $1.44 today!
that's 50-60 cents from where it was recently.

It's the old method of pump and dump, dump as much as you can, while you can,
cuz yer in trouble.

watch out for duplicated press releases soon! (it'll happen!)

I mean press releases that are exact to the letter of previous ones, even ones
from only a month ago...

it's an old scam. when they do that, their stock will go up again, a bit. maybe
only 10 cents at most, but on large trades, that's lots of money!

[ Reply to This | # ]

Another SCO Declaration From Someone Not Involved in the APA - Troy Keller - Updated 2X
Authored by: Anonymous on Tuesday, May 29 2007 @ 05:25 PM EDT
"WHEREAS, Assignor has developed, created, written, and/or acquired certain inventions, patent applications, trade secrets, trademarks and trademark applications, designs, products, processes and works of authorship prior to the Effective Date, including but not limited to, the software code, inventions, trade secrets, trademarks and trademark applications designs, products, processes and works of authorship listed in Schedules A-C attached hereto (the "Inventions and Works") (which do not include the Excluded Assets, as defined in the Reorganization Plan, and any intellectual property rights appurtenant thereto"

IANAL, but I think the operative word is 'certain', as in "certain schools didn't score well academically". The certain schools (or intellectual property components), it is implied, will be enumerated later. If none are enumerated later, one can't reasonably presume that all are included.

[ Reply to This | # ]

I am not clear if I am clear about all this
Authored by: Alan(UK) on Tuesday, May 29 2007 @ 05:45 PM EDT
1) AT&T owned some Unix copyrights. There is also some Unix for which nobody
owns the copyrights. And there is also some Unix code for which somebody else
owns the copyrights. The ownership of some Unix code is lost in the mists of
time.

2) The AT&T code is an AT&T asset and should be shown in their books as
such.

3) AT&T sold their copyrights to Novell - how did they specify which of the
AT&T copyrights were to be transfered? Was it easily done because the Unix
copyrights were all together in one 'Unix Division' or were they scattered
around the AT&T empire?

4) The copyrights should now be removed as assets on AT&T's books and added
to Novell's books.

5) The transfer of the copyrights to the Santa Cruz Operation is fully
documented in the ATA which says that they were not transfered but for legal
purposes should be taken as a written assignment of copyrights. Just to be quite
sure, we have a 2nd Amendment to the ATA which also says the copyrights are not
transfered - this should be treated in the same manner.

6) Insert usual stuff about assets and books but with Novell and Santa Cruz
Operation.

7) Santa Cruz Operation sells anything it got from Novell to Caldera - does not
mention copyrights but the document is to be taken as a legal assignment if
there are any.

8) You know the drill - Santa Cruz Operation and Caldera.

9) Just for good measure, Caldera/SCOG asks Novell again for the copyrights.

If I have got it right, I still have three problems:

a) Has anyone ever documented what copyrights they own with specificity
sufficient to relate the copyright with the relevant code?

b) Has any party ever recorded in their books the value of the copyrights as an
asset?

c) Is there any evidence that the copyrights were ever transfered to anyone?

---
Microsoft is nailing up its own coffin from the inside.

[ Reply to This | # ]

Part of Exhibit 1.4 (b)
Authored by: Anonymous on Wednesday, May 30 2007 @ 06:35 AM EDT
This part of Exhibit 1.4 (b) was taken from the Prospectus prepared by
Caldera & Santa Cruz when seeking shareholder approval, and filed with the
SEC.

The pdf of this document is over 300 pages long with all kinds of other stuff.

The link to the PDF is <a href="http://sco.tuxrocks.com/Docs/SCO-
Caldera.pdf">Prospectus</a>

Relevant text here:

Exhibit 1.4(b)(i)(D)

Certain Excluded Assets owned by SCO have been bundled into OpenServer
and UnixWare and are
listed as follows:

‚Webtop
‚Vision FS
‚Term Lite
‚Xdesktop
‚Panorama
‚Tarantella (all versions)

1. Paid-Up License to Xdesktop and Panorama

SCO hereby grants Caldera International, Inc. (""Caldera'') a
perpetual,
irrevocable, worldwide, non-exclusive, fully paid-up and royalty free license
to use, modify and sublicense the object code and source code of the current
versions of Xdesktop and Panorama as part of OpenServer and UnixWare.
However, SCO is not obligated to provide any future updates to either
desktop or Panorama nor provide any ongoing support for either product.

2. Grace period for Removal of Technology

Within 60 days from the EÅective Time or the shipping of a new release of
UnixWare7 or OpenServer, whichever is sooner (""Grace Period''),
Caldera will
remove or disable Webtop, VisionFS and Term Lite from UnixWare7 and
OpenServer products. SCO shall commence engineering work to remove
Webtop, VisionFS and Term Lite between now and the EÅective Time and both
parties agree to use their best eÅorts to complete this work as quickly as
possible. During this Grace Period, SCO grants Caldera a non-exclusive,
royalty-free license to use and sublicense Webtop, VisionsFS and Term Lite as
bundled with UnixWare7 and OpenServer. Following the expiration of the
Grace Period, Caldera shall pay SCO a royalty for VisionFS and Webtop in
accordance with Section 3.2 of this Exhibit.

3. Royalties Due to SCO for Future Shipments

3.1Unbundled Product Sales

Caldera may sell both VisionFS and Tarantella Express as unbundled add on
products with
OpenServer and UnixWare. For sales of VisionFS, where such sale is an
unbundled add on, Caldera shall
pay to SCO a royalty of 40% of net revenues received from the sale of Vision
FS or 20% of the then-
current SCO list price for Vision FS, whichever is higher. Caldera may
purchase and resell Tarantella
products using SCO's then-current distribution agreement. Caldera may also
sell Webtop, Vision FS, Term
Lite, Xdesktop and Panorama with the OpenServer and UnixWare packaging
under the terms of that
certain OEM Distribution Agreement, dated June 27, 2000, between Caldera
Systems and SCO, as may
be amended from time to time.

3.2 Bundled Product/Technology sales

Following the expiration of the Grace Period, when Caldera sells Vision FS or
Tarantella Express bundled (not separately priced) with OpenServer or
UnixWare, Caldera shall pay to SCO a royalty of 20% of the then-current SCO
list price for the unbundled SCO product. When Caldera sells any version of
UnixWare with Webtop bundled, the royalty due for Webtop shipments will be
$100 per bundled unit sold. SCO shall not be obligated to provide support
with respect to Vision FS, Tarantella Express or Webtop products; provided,
however, that SCO shall, at the Effective Time, provide to Caldera licenses to
the source code of such products for support purposes only, each in
substantially the form attached hereto.

A-81

[ Reply to This | # ]

SCO is trying to ...
Authored by: Anonymous on Wednesday, May 30 2007 @ 08:16 AM EDT
It seems that SCO is trying to:-

1. Prove that the agreement is capable of 2 interpretations.

2. Ask for the other interpretation to be accepted.

This means, if a party proves that an agreement is ambiguous and hence capable
of being understood as saying both X or Y; and people unrelated to the agreement
have understood that it means (say,) X then, the other party cannot insist that
the agreement should be interpreted as meaning Y.

This is an attempt at ``discovered check'' as chess players would call it.

[ Reply to This | # ]

Groklaw © Copyright 2003-2013 Pamela Jones.
All trademarks and copyrights on this page are owned by their respective owners.
Comments are owned by the individual posters.

PJ's articles are licensed under a Creative Commons License. ( Details )