http://ipkitten.blogspot.com/2020/02/can-states-pirate-works-without-paying.html
Of all the matters before the Supreme Court this term, this Kat is anxiously awaiting an opinion in one pirating case: Allen v. Cooper. The case concerns the validity of the Copyright Remedy Clarification Act (CRCA) (1990), a bill that abrogates state sovereign immunity with respects to copyright infringement. The question before the Court is whether or not Congress has the power – as the federal legislature – to abrogate state sovereign immunity. Here are several of the potential grounds that the Court may consider for valid abrogation:
Background
Blackbeard the Pirate |
Fredrick Allen is the sole photographer and videographer of the Queen Anne’s Revenge shipwreck; the ship was captained by pirate, Blackbeard, and sunk off the coast of North Carolina in 1718. Allen found infringement on websites hosted and operated by the State of North Carolina in 2013; the state settled, promising to pay royalties and provide attribution on all future uses. The infringement continued however, leading to the current litigation.
In 2015, the state further pressed the issue by enacting Blackbeard’s Law; this law made “all photographs, video records, or other documentary materials of a derelict vessel or shipwreck, [and] relics, artifacts or historic materials in state custody” public records, exempted from copyright protection.
The Eastern District of North Carolina ruled that Allen was entitled to sue the state for money damages, but the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals overruled that decision. Now, the case is before the Supreme Court to determine the validity of Congress’ abrogation of state sovereign immunity under the CRCA.
State Sovereign Immunity
“The Judicial power of the United States shall not be construed to extend to any suit in law or equity, commenced or prosecuted against one of the United States by Citizens of another State, or by Citizens or Subjects of any Foreign State.”
In the Hans v. Louisiana (1890) decision, the Court determined that the 11th Amendment maintained state sovereign immunity in federal courts where state laws were at issue, but abrogation with respect to federal laws would not be addressed for nearly 100 years. In Pennsylvania v. Union Gas (1989), the Court held that Congress could abrogate state sovereign immunity under its Article 1 Commerce Clause Power. Following that case, Congress passed several statutes abrogating state sovereign immunity; these laws concerned a variety of powers granted to Congress under Article 1 of the Constitution, including patents, copyrights (through the CRCA), and the regulation of commerce with “the Indian Tribes.”
Rise of the 11th Amendment
- Constitutional violation by a state
- A pattern of such violations
- That the remedial action enacted by Congress was congruent and proportional to the wrong
Katz: The Pendulum Swings
This Kat certainly seems sovereign |
The plan of convention concept stems from the Federalist papers; in Federalist 81, Alexander Hamilton notes the intention of the federal system is to allow for abrogation of state sovereign immunity where state sovereignty is alienated by the constitution. The grounds for alienation – and, by extension abrogation – are enumerated in Federalist 32:
1. where the Constitution in express terms granted an exclusive authority to the Union;
2. where it granted in one instance an authority to the Union, and in another prohibited the States from exercising the like authority; and
3. where it granted an authority to the Union, to which a similar authority in the States would be absolutely and totally contradictory and repugnant.
Hamilton explains “contradictory and repugnant” in Federalist 32, drawing a distinction between those Article 1 powers requiring uniformity (such as naturalization) and those where concurrent sovereignty is germane (such as taxation).
The Court in Katz explored the historical context of bankruptcy as an in rem jurisdictional matter, as well as the intent for uniformity, exclusivity in federal jurisdiction, and state participation. Finding an intent for uniformity in the constitutional text and the historical context, as well as noting exclusive federal court jurisdiction and state participation in bankruptcy matters, the Court ruled that Article 1 served as a valid basis for Congress to abrogate state sovereign immunity in bankruptcy.
Grounds for Abrogation
immunity by Congress if it was in the plan of the convention for states to waive their immunity. Additionally, there is a strong case for valid abrogation under Section 5 of the 14th Amendment, in three different respects.
Article 1 – Plan of Convention Waiver
“The Congress shall have Power … To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries”
While this power grant does not fit within the first or second category of alienation of state sovereignty, there is some support for the notion that uniform rule in copyright was in the plan of the convention. Prior to the constitution, Noah Webster urged the states to pass copyright laws, inspired by the model of the Statute of Anne (1710). The federal government lacked the authority to regulate copyrights under the Articles of Confederation (1781-89), leaving the power to the states.
Atticus is fully abrogating! |
These state laws were ineffective, however, as an author would need to register in each state individually; further, several states’ laws included provisions whereby the law would not go into effect until each state provided the same protections. Such laws never came into effect, as Delaware never passed a copyright law under the Articles of Confederation.
As a result, James Madison wrote in Federalist 43 that “[t]he States cannot separately make effectual provisions” for copyright, noting that the Federal government will provide uniformity by anticipating the laws of the states in this regard. This extrinsic record provides a reasonable basis for assuming an intention for uniformity, and thus, valid abrogation of state sovereign immunity in copyright. There is little intrinsic record to establish intent either way, as the copyright clause was passed unanimously without recorded debate at the constitutional convention.
14th Amendment, Section 5
Privileges or Immunities Clause
Due Process of Law
Takings Clause
Atticus only takes for his personal use |
The 14th Amendment incorporates the Takings clause of the 5th Amendment, whereby the taking of property for public use without just compensation is prohibited; through the 14th Amendment, this prohibition is extended to the states.
Noting that only takings for “public use” would violate this provision, Congress’ authority to abrogate state sovereign immunity may be limited to those cases where the state infringes a public use of the copyright. A reasonable construction of “public use” in copyright would limit abrogation to infringements of the rights of public display, public performance, and distribution to the public.
This presents a similar Boerne analysis as the other two cases, although internal uses where only the right of reproduction is implicated would not serve as constitutional violations necessary to abrogate immunity under Section 5 of the 14th Amendment. Blackbeard’s Law, however, would be a clear violation of the Takings clause.
Prediction
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