If You Build A House Based On Copyright Infringing Plans That You Bought In Good Faith… Are You Infringing?

from the maybe-so dept

Michael Scott points us to an interesting — if a bit technical legally speaking — discussion over whether or not indemnifications exist for copyrighted materials. The discussion involves a homebuilder, who built some homes based on plans he bought from a third party. It later turned out that the plans were infringing copies, but the builder believed they were legit. So, in any common sense world, the liable party should be the guy who sold the infringing plans. But at least some lawyers and judges seem to believe that there is no indemnification in copyright law, and thus the copyright holder can basically sue whoever he wants up and down the chain. But, of course, not everyone sees it that way, and by the end of the post, it’s pretty clear that the court in this particular case got it wrong. Blaming the builder, who had no clue that the plans were infringing, simply makes no sense.

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Comments on “If You Build A House Based On Copyright Infringing Plans That You Bought In Good Faith… Are You Infringing?”

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42 Comments
Rose M. Welch (profile) says:

This is very similiar to the law firm who got sued because they purchased a site that had some infringing material. How were they supposed to know? They purchased the material in good faith.

I know that in my jewelry store, we purchase jewelry from people, and it if turns up stolen, the police and the victims certainly don’t hold us responsible! The person who stole the items is responsible. If that is true for real goods, how could it be less true for intellectual property?

This is getting silly.

Gatewood Green (profile) says:

Re: Rose's question


I know that in my jewelry store, we purchase jewelry from people, and it if turns up stolen, the police and the victims certainly don’t hold us responsible! The person who stole the items is responsible. If that is true for real goods, how could it be less true for intellectual property?

Simply because if your jewelery is stolen, you no longer have it to use yourself. If I have a copy of your floor plan, you *still* have it yourself and can still use it even though I have a copy of it. Now if I used (what I have reasonable reason to believe is) a legitimate floor plan supplier, how am I supposed to know (s)he did not obtain your plans legitimately. How do I know my supplier did not create the plans themselves?

Nothing silly here at all. The ‘source’ of the plans the builder used should be on the hook for whatever the plans would have cost plus punitive damages as appropriate. Now if you can prove the builder did not obtain the plans *in good faith* legitimately, then (s)he is on the hook for same (addressing the shell company proposal in another comment).

you want a name well for now my name is fred. says:

Here is the simple fact: The contractor gets sued. He in turn sues the person who sold him the plans for the amount of any judgement he has to pay, plus additional. It passes on down the line. Unlike that stupid website judgement, the deal is clear here: The contractor is at fault up front, and he then needs to litigate on down the line. Each step bears it’s own piece of the responsibility.

Dark Helmet (profile) says:

Re: Re:

“Here is the simple fact: The contractor gets sued. He in turn sues the person who sold him the plans for the amount of any judgement he has to pay, plus additional. It passes on down the line. Unlike that stupid website judgement, the deal is clear here: The contractor is at fault up front, and he then needs to litigate on down the line. Each step bears it’s own piece of the responsibility.”

Amazing how many lawyers your solution requires. It won’t work after I’ve been proclaimed King of America and have made my first order of business the senseless slaughter of the entire legal system. Bwahahahahaha!

….No, seriously, I plan to take over America.

Anonymous Coward says:

“Here is the simple fact: The contractor gets sued. He in turn sues the person who sold him the plans for the amount of any judgement he has to pay, plus additional. It passes on down the line. Unlike that stupid website judgement, the deal is clear here: The contractor is at fault up front, and he then needs to litigate on down the line. Each step bears it’s own piece of the responsibility.”

How is this anything but a complete waste of resources? If the chain is 10 parties long then you get 10 unnecessary lawsuits, instead of just having the copyright holder go straight to the party acting in bad faith. To say nothing of what happens if the bad actor is insolvent: Perfectly innocent people on the hook for penalties designed to deter fraudulent actors.

Doctor Strange says:

Re: Using that logic

Can i4i sue me if I buy a copy of word ?

Yes, they could.

Your question is phrased imprecisely, of course. I take issue only because on Techdirt, there’s no perceived difference between being sued and being sued successfully. So yes, i4i can sue you for just about anything they want.

The question you presumably really want answered is: can they sue you with a ghost’s chance in hell of winning?

Yes also, although not for the same reasons as in this story here. This is a copyright issue; the i4i vs. Word issue is a patent issue. A patent grants an exclusive right to make, use, or sell an invention. Since you would be a Word user, you could be found liable for infringement. Of course, the costs of suing you individually greatly exceed what they could possibly expect to recover, so it won’t happen.

Microsoft actually is fairly explicit about how it indemnifies and attempts to protect its end-users against these sorts of things. It’s one of Microsoft’s selling points over things like open-source software. Whether or not you think this indemnification has any value is entirely up to you.

The Cenobyte (profile) says:

floor tile

My father was once sued because he didn’t specify they use floor tile on the floor and the wall tile on the wall in a building he designed. Someone then someone walked in on a rainy day slipped, fell and broke a leg. They sued the contractor too and they won both cases. Then my father had to sue the contractor to get his money back and won. In the end it only cost him time but it seemed pretty silly overall, the contrator got screwed twice for the same mistake and the lawyers made out great.

Anonymous Coward says:

Dark Helmet when you say take over america do you mean The america’s TM or North America?
also do you like fluffy stuff or furry stuff better?

so if say someone infringes something and a chain is created would it be possible to sue everyone on the chain no matter how far removed they are from the original transaction. lol trans. like even if the chain is say 100 links long? and if so how come no one has like tried to wait and see how long a chain can become and make a gazzillion dollars from sueing?

Dark Helmet (profile) says:

Re: Re:

“Dark Helmet when you say take over america do you mean The america’s TM or North America?
also do you like fluffy stuff or furry stuff better?”

A. The Stars and Stripes America. The rest of the Americas are largely too effed for even me to bother with. Especially Argentina. Entirely too many German last names for a South American country, if you take my meaning.

B. I prefer furry fluffers.

That is all.

HolaJohnny (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

Dark Helmet your now on the FBI watch list for that comment. Your just an exhibitionist showing off for them. Your sick! *cue evil laugh* And just because your too good for Argentina doesn’t mean I am. Damn they have some good beef. I’ll take over Argentina just to have a monopoly on their beef. And by monopoly I mean I’m going to eat it all myself…

Ben Robinson (profile) says:

My former company had a similar problem.

I used to work for a company that made HR software. We had a pretty similar situation to the one described. A number of years previously the current shareholder bought out his partner to become the sole shareholder (it is a private company). The outgoing partner retained no rights to any of the company’s products. A number of year later we discovered that another company was selling a product that bore a striking resemblance to one of our older generation products. We were not actively marketing this product any more but it was still available and we were supporting a number of customers who still used the software. We contacted the other company and sure enough they told us that they had purchased the source code for it from the former business partner. We sent them a copy of our source code for comparison and they said that the it was a very close match source code they had been sold. We could have taken the easy route and sued the company for selling our product. However they were clearly the victims here so what we did instead was that we sold them the rights to the source code (it was after all and old generation product), and then worked with them so that they could now sue the outgoing business partner for selling them source code fraudulently.

This seems to be a good common sense way of dealing with this sort of thing, the victims cooperate to go after the perpatrator.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: My former company had a similar problem.

We could have taken the easy route and sued the company for selling our product. However they were clearly the victims here so what we did instead was that we sold them the rights to the source code (it was after all and old generation product), and then worked with them so that they could now sue the outgoing business partner for selling them source code fraudulently.

Now how are the lawyers going to keep up with the payments on their third vacation house with you doing common-sense things like that? I’m surprised your lawyers didn’t sue you for failing to sue this other company.

Anonymous Coward says:

Movies can't buy insurance?

The issue here is indemnity not infringement. However, the house is pretty clearly an infringing copy if the builder is halfway competent. If he screwed it up so badly its unrecognizable as a house, he may have an out. Otherwise, the house is either a copy as a near-perfect rendition in a different medium or a derivative work even if the builder deviated from the plants.

Regarding indemnity, there is no way this ruling will stand. It looks like the court messed up by not using the occupying-the-field test. I really doubt there is evidence of Congressional intent to prevent indemnification. The side effect of this would be to prevent insurance for non-willful copyright infringement. This means every movie ever made is up a creek.

From a Chicago school angle, we allow insurance against any kind of legal liability except for intentional torts and gross negligence. This is economically efficient. It is not economically efficient to treat unintentional copyright liability the same as an intentional tort.

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