District of Massachusetts Grants Prince’s Estate Permanent Injunction Against YouTuber Who Repeatedly Posted Live Prince Performances
/Comerica Bank & Trust, N.A. v. Habib, No. 17-12418-LTS, 2020 WL 58527 (D. Mass. Jan. 6, 2020).
Prince’s estate alleged that Defendant committed copyright infringement and violated the federal civil anti-bootlegging statute by recording and posting several videos of live Prince concerts to YouTube. In response, Defendant argued fair use, which failed as the District of Massachusetts found that all four factors weighed in favor of Prince’s estate.
Defendant also moved for summary judgment based on various other defenses, including non-commercial use and good faith use, which the court denied as well.
Moreover, Prince’s estate moved to increase the award of statutory damages under the Copyright Act based on Defendant’s willful infringement. The court granted this motion as Defendant’s continued posting of similar videos and insistence that “every artist encourages people to post videos,” which showed disregard for musician rights.
As to Plaintiff’s anti-bootlegging claim, the Court discussed how the statute is rarely litigated and noted that the question of “whether [the statute’s] protections are descendible and may be invoked by the estate of a once-protected performer” has never been addressed. The court provided Plaintiffs the option to file a supplemental brief on the question if it wishes.
The court also denied Defendant’s defense that Prince’s broad statement that “nobody sues their fans . . . fans sharing music with each other, that’s cool” acted as an implied license to post the videos. As such, the Court granted Plaintiff’s motion for a permanent injunction and scheduled a damages trial for March 2, 2020. [JM]