A
panel of the 2nd US Circuit Court of Appeals in New York said Circuit
Judge Denny Chin prematurely certified a class of authors without first
deciding if the "fair use" defense under US copyright law allowed Google
to display snippets of books.
The three-judge
panel also signaled it may prove improper to allow a class action on
behalf of potentially hundreds of thousands of writers arguing that the
Google Books Library Project improperly copied their works without
permission.
"Putting aside the merits of
Google's claim that plaintiffs are not representative of the certified
class — an argument which, in our view, may carry some force — we
believe that the resolution of Google's fair use defense in the first
instance will necessarily inform and perhaps moot our analysis of many
class certification issues," the panel said.
A
class action would let The Authors Guild, an association of authors,
and others sue as a group rather than individually, potentially
resulting in higher awards and lower legal costs.
Google
has scanned more than 20 million books after partnering in 2004 with
major libraries around the world such as the Harvard University library
and the New York Public Library.
The lawsuit
began in 2005, and Google has estimated that it could eventually owe
more than $3 billion if The Authors Guild, which has demanded $750 for
each scanned book, were to prevail.
"We're
obviously disappointed," Michael Boni, a lawyer for The Authors Guild,
said in a phone interview. "We're going to litigate the fair use now,
and that is the shooting match."
Matt Kallman,
a Google spokesman, in an emailed statement said the Mountain View,
California-based company is "delighted" with the decision.
Google has said its digitization of current and out-of-print works would help researchers and the general public.
It
has argued that authors, especially of obscure works, could benefit the
library, and that a case-by-case approach was needed to determine fair
use.
De facto monopoly
In certifying
a class, Chin in May 2012 said it would be unfair to force authors to
sue individually given the "sweeping and undiscriminating nature of
Google's unauthorized copying."
But the 2nd
Circuit panel said several court rulings, including a 2011 US Supreme
Court decision favoring Wal-Mart Stores Inc, might help Google avoid a
class action.
It sent the case back to Chin to review fair use issues, and eventually consider class certification again.
In
March 2011, Chin had rejected a $125 million settlement, saying it
raised copyright and antitrust issues by giving Google a "de facto
monopoly" to copy books en masse without permission.
Among the individual plaintiffs is former New York Yankees baseball pitcher Jim Bouton, the author of "Ball Four."
Groups of photographers and graphic artists have also been suing Google over its digitization of their works.
Publishers had also been part of the lawsuit, but settled with Google last October.
The
2nd Circuit panel included Circuit Judges Pierre Leval, Jose Cabranes
and Barrington Parker. Chin oversaw the case as a trial judge and kept
jurisdiction after joining the 2nd Circuit.
The case is Authors Guild et al v Google, 2nd US Circuit Court of Appeals, No. 12-3200.
No comments:
Post a Comment