The rock band Lynyrd Skynyrd was the subject of a recent Second Circuit decision in which the widow of band founder Ronnie Van Zant sued to enforce a contract against drummer Artimus Pyle and Cleopatra Films. On October 20, 1977, a Convair propeller plane carrying the members of Lynyrd Skynyrd and a 20-person entourage ran…
I’ve written before about the legal battle between the bands Led Zeppelin and Spirit. Randy Wolf of Spirit wrote a song called “Taurus” and his estate”s representative alleged that “Stairway to Heaven” infringed on the copyright of that song. According to Wolf, the opening notes of “Stairway to Heaven” were substantially similar to the opening notes of…
Sometimes patience is a virtue. I have a client who owns an apartment, on the next-to-top floor of a small building. Her upstairs neighbor has a penthouse — and a greenhouse. One day, the greenhouse started to leak. The client complained to the upstairs neighbor and nothing was done to improve the situation, so we…
I was a big Batman fan when I was a kid. That’s one of the reasons Kaufman v. Warner Brothers caught my attention (the other sharing the correct spelling of the plaintiff’s surname — no relation!). This was a case that did not go well for the plaintiff — and frankly was a bit of a stretch…
Bright Ideas, the New York Bar Association’s I.P. Journal, published an article that Mark Kaufman wrote. It provides a detailed discussion of one of our previous blog articles, Metadata? The Devil (and the Credit) Is in the Details. Be warned, this version for the Bar Association is a bit more lawyerly, so it might be exuberantly…
In Frederick L. Allen; Nautilus Productions, LLC v. Roy A. Cooper, III, Governor of North Carolina, the shipwreck of the infamous pirate ship Queen Anne’s Revenge failed to deliver intellectual property riches its explorers had expected. The Queen Anne’s Revenge famously was run aground off the coast of North Carolina in 1717 — some say intentionally — by Edward…
In a recent case called Viacom v. IJR Capital, the issue centered around defendant’s plan to open a chain of restaurants called Krusty Krab — just like the fictional restaurant in Viacom’s SpongeBob Squarepants franchise. That perennial cash cow spans a wide variety of media outlets, including the original television series, a movie, a musical, and downloadable…
On April 19, Lance Armstrong was in the news again as he reached a settlement with the United States Postal Service for $5 million in a false claims suit that sought $100 million. The case, called Landis v. Armstrong, featured detailed accounts of the doping that professional cyclists take in order to compete at the highest world level —…
