Dent v. Renaissance Marketing Corp., 2015 WL 3484464 (N.D.Ill. 2015) involves a royalty dispute over the 1985 “Super Bowl Shuffle” – a storied (locally, at least) song and video performed by several Chicago Bears football players – the Shufflin’ Crew – to commemorate the Bears’ Super Bowl thrashing of the New England Patriots that year.
And while the case’s connection to football coupled with its celebrity-slash-nostalgia sensibility naturally piques a reader’s interest, the case is legally post-worthy mainly for its useful, quick-hits discussion of the operative rules governing Federal removal jurisdiction and copyright preemption.
The lawsuit pits former Bears players against a marketing firm and an individual who held a now-expired license to market the Shuffle video in an action challenging the defendants’ unauthorized use of the plaintiffs’ identities.
Removal and Remand
Removal (from state court to Federal court) is controlled by 28 USC s. 1441, which provides that any state court suit of which a Federal district court has original jurisdiction may be removed by the defendant;
Only state court cases that could have originally been filed in Federal court are subject to removal;
Once a case is removed to Federal court, it can be remanded (sent back) to the removing state court at any time where the Federal court loses subject matter jurisdiction;
Whether a case is ripe for removal is determined at time of removal – any post-removal amendments to a complaint normally won’t strip the Federal court of jurisdiction over the removed action;
A Federal court can retain supplemental jurisdiction over state law claims where the Federal claim is dismissed. However, if all claims that gave the Federal court original jurisdiction are dismissed, the Federal court can (and most likely will) relinquish jurisdiction over the state law claims.
What About Preemption?
Preemption applies where a Federal law proverbially “covers the field.” That is, the Federal law is so broad that it completely displaces state-law claims that cover the same topic. If a state law complaint implicates (but doesn’t specifically mention) an expansive Federal law that touches on a complaint’s subject matter, that state law case can be removed to Federal court.
The Federal Copyright Act (17 U.S.C. s. 101 et seq.) is a prime example of a Federal statute that pre-empts equivalent state-law rights. If a state law complaint involves legal and equitable rights that are within copyright’s subject matter, then that state law claim – even though it makes no mention of copyright law can still be removed to Federal court. (**2-3).
To avoid copyright pre-emption in a royalty dispute, a state law claim must involve a right that is “qualitatively distinguishable” from the five copyright rights – the right to reproduce, distribute, perform, adapt (perform derivative works) and display a work. 17 U.S.C. ss. 106, 301.
Illinois Right of Publicity Act – Is it Pre-empted by the Copyright Act?
In a close call, the answer here was “no.” The reason: there is a fine-line distinction between using a plaintiff’s identity or persona (which implicates a right to publicity) and infringing on a that plaintiff’s rights to publish (or distribute or reproduce or display) a given work (which invokes copyright law protections).
The Illinois Right of Publicity Act (“IRPA”) gives individuals the right to control and choose whether and how to use an individual’s identity for commercial purposes. 765 ILCS 1075/10. IRPA bans the unauthorized use of a plaintiff’s personal identity for a commercial purpose.
The crux of the plaintiffs’ IRPA claim was that the defendants held themselves out as having an affiliation with or connection to the Shufflin’ Crew and used the Crew members’ personas in marketing defendants’ products and services.
The court found that the plaintiffs’ IRPA claim wasn’t pre-empted by copyright law. The reason was because the plaintiffs’ IRPA claim was based on more than the defendants’ unauthorized marketing of the Super Bowl Shuffle music video. Instead, the plaintiffs alleged the defendants traded in and profited from the crew members’ identities or “personas” in trying to sell Shuffle copies – an action distinct from performing or distributing the work itself. Since plaintiffs’ IRPA claim was not based on unauthorized reproductions or distributions of the Shuffle music video, copyright law didn’t pre-empt the plaintiffs’ IRPA suit. (**4-5).
Once plaintiffs dropped their displaced state law claims (conversion, injunctive relief, declaratory relief), the Federal court remanded the remaining claims (IRPA, unjust enrichment, equitable accounting) to state court finding the state court better equipped to handle those claims.
Afterwords:
1/ When all Federal claims drop out of a removed case, a Federal court will likely remand the case to state court unless there is a compelling reason to keep it in Federal court;
2/ A state court action can be pre-empted by a Federal statute (like the Copyright Act) where the state court claims implicate Federal statutory rights and obligations even where the state claims make no mention of the Federal claims;
3/ The case illustrates that the respective legal interests vindicated by the Illinois Right to Publicity Act and Federal Copyright statute are similar yet still different enough to avoid pre-emption in certain factual contexts.