Federal Circuits, 4th Cir. (December 09, 1991)
Docket number: 90-2230
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http://vlex.com/vid/progressive-integon-37406276
Id. vLex: VLEX-37406276
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U.S. Code - Title 17: Copyrights - 17 USC 301 - Sec. 301. Preemption with respect to other laws
U.S. Code - Title 17: Copyrights - 17 USC 101 - Sec. 101. Definitions
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, at Alexandria. Claude M. Hilton, District Court Judge. (CA-90-488-A)
Louis A. Colombo, Baker & Hostetler, Cleveland, Ohio, for appellants.Mark Nixon Poovey, Womble, Carlyle, Sandridge & Rice, Winston-Salem, N.C., for appellee. On Brief: Deborah A. Schaff, Baker & Hostetler, Cleveland, Ohio, for appellants.Jeffrey R. McFadden, Womble, Carlyle, Sandridge & Rice, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, for appellees.E.D.Va.AFFIRMED.Before WIDENER and MURNAGHAN, Circuit Judges, and JOSEPH H. YOUNG, Senior United States District Court Judge for the District of Maryland, Sitting by Designation.OPINIONPER CURIAM:The Progressive Corporation ("Progressive") appeals the district court's dismissal of its state law counts and its entry of summary judgment in favor of Integon P & C Corporation ("Integon") on Progressive's copyright infringement and Lanham Act claims. Finding that Progressive's work is not copyrightable, we affirm.* The Progressive Corporation, through its subsidiaries, Progressive Casualty Insurance Company and its subsidiary, Progressive Specialty Insurance Company, ("Progressive") is an underwriter of high risk automobile insurance in Virginia through 900 independent agents. Progressive developed a "relative damageability" index for individual vehicle makes and models, and used this information to make an independent determination of the relative damage any particular make and model of vehicle is likely to incur in an accident. Progressive also developed a unique way of refining subclassifications of risk characteristics, consisting of variables including age, sex, marital status, vehicle type, vehicle age, geographic description of garaging location and driving record. Based on its analysis and research, Progressive weights the variables in relation to one another to determine a rate figure most appropriate for any particular customer.Progressive first introduced manuals incorporating its methodology in 1957. In 1977, Progressive distributed Progressive Casualty Manuals addressing high risk drivers and vehicles.Effective February 4, 1988, Progressive's Virginia specialty insurance company, Progressive Casualty, published its 1988 rate manual entitled "Virginia Non-Standard Automobile Program" describing which risks Progressive would accept and at what price. The 1988 Casualty Manual, like all of Progressive's previous manuals, was published without a copyright notice and distributed to hundreds of independent insurance agents throughout Virginia.Effective January 9, 1989, Progressive Casualty introduced an update of the 1988 Casualty Manual (the "1989 Progressive Casualty Manual" or the "1989 Casualty Manual"). The 1989 Casualty Manual described the same method for determining which insurance risks to accept and at what price, as that contained in the 1988 Casualty Manual. The 1989 Casualty Manual was also published.In September 1989, Progressive instituted a new program featuring lower "auto-saver" rates. This Progressive Specialty program was a "clone" of its previous insurance product, the 1989 Casualty program. The only substantive difference was that the Specialty program featured approximately 10% lower rates to consumers and 10% sales commissions to agents, compared to Casualty's 15% sales commissions.The rates for the new Specialty insurance were set forth in the "1989 Specialty Manual." Progressive placed a copyright notice on the back cover of the Speciality Manual. Prior to the publication of the 1989 Specialty Manual, Progressive filed substantial portions of that Manual, without a copyright notice, with the Virginia Bureau of Insurance, as required by Va.Code 38.2-1900-.2-1928 (1985 & Supp.1990).Integon P & C Corporation ("Integon") is the parent corporation of New South Insurance Company, an underwriter of high risk automobile insurance sold in Virginia through its network of approximately 470 independent insurance agents. In 1989, Integon resolved to compete with Progressive by utilizing Progressive's pricing method, but sold its insurance to consumers at prices that were approximately 10% lower than Progressive Casualty's and paid a commission of 15% to its independent agents.In September 1989, Rick Pierce, an Integon Marketing Representative, obtained an uncopyrighted copy of Progressive's rating formula from Progressive's filing at the Virginia Bureau of Insurance. The formula was the key and Pierce was then able to closely approximate Progressive's method for calculating rates. By October 1989, Integon was successful in its efforts to approximate Progressive's method.The rates for Integon's non-standard automobile insurance program introduced in Virginia on January 1, 1990 were set forth in a manual entitled "New South Insurance Company Virginia Specialty Auto Program" (the "First Integon Specialty Manual"). Integon admittedly utilized and, in some portions, directly copied the 1989 Progressive Specialty Manual, in developing the First Integon Specialty Manual. Integon mailed the First Integon Specialty Manual to independent agents in Virginia who sold Integon insurance.Integon first learned that Progressive claimed a copyright in the 1989 Progressive Specialty Manual when it received a letter dated March 13, 1990, from Progressive's counsel notifying Integon that the 1989 Progressive Specialty Manual was copyrighted.1 After receiving notice of the copyright, Integon, without admitting any legal accountability, voluntarily revised the First Integon Specialty Manual by changing the wording, order, structure and format to make it as different as possible from the 1989 Progressive Specialty Manual. Integon changed the language and the form, but not the rates or the pricing method upon which the rates were based, all of which were described in the manual. The Current Integon Specialty Manual became effective April 23, 1990 and since that time, the First Integon Specialty Manual has not been used by Integon or its agents.Progressive filed a five count complaint on April 11, 1990, asserting claims against Integon for copyright infringement (Count I), violation of section 43(a) of the Lanham Act (Count II), Virginia common law unfair competition (Count III), false advertising under Va.Code section 18,2-216 (Count IV), and tortious interference with present and prospective business relations (Count V). The parties' agreed that there were no issues of material fact in dispute and each moved for summary judgment under an agreement with the district court that its ruling would resolve this case at the trial level.By Order date June 18, 1990, the district court dismissed Progressive's state law claims and on October 23, 1990, granted Integon summary judgment on Progressive's copyright infringement and Lanham Act claims (Counts I and II). Progressive appeals the court's Order granting Integon's motion to dismiss the state law claims and the Order granting summary judgment to Integon on the copyright infringement and Lanham Act claims.IIProgressive disputes the court's finding that the materials were published when they were filed pursuant to a statutory requirement. It argues that filing materials pursuant to a statutory requirement, even if those materials do not bear a copyright notice, does not affect the copyrightability of those materials, since the copyright notice is not required on such materials because their filing does not constitute a "publication" within the meaning of the Copyright Act. WPOW, Inc. v. MRLJ Enterprises, 584 F.Supp. 132, 136 (D.D.C.1984); East/West Venture v. Wurmfeld Assoc., P.C., 722 F.Supp. 1064, 1066 (S.D.N.Y.1989).Insurers conducting business in Virginia are required as a condition of doing business to file with the Bureau of Insurance certain "rate and supplementary rate" information. Va.Code § 38.2-1906. That information becomes public upon filing. Va.Code § 38.2-1907 ("Each filing and all supplementary rate information filed under this chapter shall be open to public inspection. Copies may be obtained by any person on request and upon payment of the reasonable charge for the copies.").It is undisputed that the 1989 Casualty Filing did not contain any copyright notice. Pursuant to the above cited provisions of the Virginia Code, Progressive filed substantial portions of the 1989 Casualty Manual with the Bureau of Insurance. Therefore, once filed, such materials become a matter of public record and are subject to inspection and unlimited copying by the public at large. See DeSilva Constr. Corp. v. Herrald, 213 F.Supp. 184, 194 (M.D.Fla.1962) ("the filing of architectural plans in a public office, even though it is required by statute or ordinance, is tantamount to publication of said plans and amounts to a dedication to the public"). In DeSilva, the court stated[i]n a statutory copyright case, the proprietor of the set of the copyrighted plans can protect himself by inserting the required copyright notice on the plans prior to filing said set of plans with the building department. It is no hardship to require architects to comply with the notice requirements of the copyright statute, and there is no excuse for the failure to have a copyright notice on said plans.Id.Contrary to Progressive's argument, publication occurs when the public obtains a possessory right in copies of the work and the unlimited copying permitted by the Virginia Code. 1 Nimmer § 4.07 at 439-40 ("no publication should be held to occur unless the public obtain a possessory right in tangible copies of the work"). The Virginia Code gives to the public, including competitors, the right to obtain possession of tangible copies of materials filed with the Virginia Bureau of Insurance.The cases cited by Progressive are inapposite. The court in East/West relied upon WPOW. However, in WPOW, the copyright infringement was premised on the court's finding that the Federal Communications Commission ("FCC") had expressly disapproved copying of the engineering reports by the plaintiff. 584 F.Supp. at 137 ("the FCC itself has expressed its disapproval of unauthorized and uncompensated appropriation of another engineer's work product"). In contrast, the Virginia legislature has expressly authorized the copying of Bureau of Insurance filings in order to promote competition in the insurance industry. Va.Code § 38.2-1900(B).Furthermore, the 1989 Progressive Specialty Manual is a duplicate of the 1988 Casualty Manual, consisting almost entirely of the same information as that in the 1988 Casualty Manual. It is undisputed that the 1988 Casualty Manual was published in 1988 without a copyright notice and distributed to hundreds of independent insurance agents.Progressive disputes the court's conclusion that the 1989 Specialty Manual contained only "trivial amounts of new material" and argues that it is a "derivative work."2It is a "well-established doctrine that a derivative copyright protects only the new material contained in the derivative work, not the matter derived from the underlying work." Russell v. Price, 612 F.2d 1123, 1128 (9th Cir.1979), cert. denied,Try vLex for FREE for 3 days
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