Defendants AIC and Clarendon (there are various cross-claims
at issue, but I’ll ignore them) issued entertainment insurance policies to
Tool, a rock band. Cameron De Leon sued
Tool for infringing his artwork and for defamation. The trial court found that AIC didn’t have a
duty to defend, and the court of appeals reversed.
Tool sells various items of merchandise with artwork on
them, and its website also has artwork (including some at issue in the
underlying action). The website is
specifically designed to advertise the band and its merchandise, and the band
members don’t run it themselves; they hired someone else to do so.
De Leon was paid for his work but never signed a WFH
agreement and claimed the copyright to at least 10 works of visual art. He alleged that any oral implied licenses he
granted to Tool were revocable and limited in time and scope, that Tool
exceeded those licenses and De Leon revoked them, and that Tool kept using the
works anyway. Specifically, he alleged
that he created the strikingly phallic Wrench logo for promotional fliers and
T-shirts, to be freely used by Tool "for a reasonable period of time"
(there’s a term designed to be
trouble-free!) but Tool exceeded that license by using it for too long and by
using the logo on other merchandise, such as underwear, keychains, hooded
sweatshirts, and stickers. In addition,
Tool allegedly used other De Leon works in connection with merchandise, on album
covers, in its videos, on its website and during its concerts.
De Leon’s complaint didn’t allege a claim for defamation,
but did allege that Tool made misrepresentations to third parties that
disparaged and defamed De Leon and caused Hot Topic and other third parties to
cease doing business with him. He also
alleged that he lost the use of at least three original works, which were never
returned to him.
The policy had an entertainment industry exclusion (EIE),
which provided: “This policy does not apply to Personal Injury or Advertising
Injury arising out of the development, pre-production, production,
post-production, distribution, exploitation, or exhibition of motion
pictures, … audio cassettes, music, musical recordings, … or other similar materials and properties.” It also had an exclusion for material
published prior to the policy period. The
trial court ultimately held that the EIE precluded coverage because De Leon
alleged that Tool used the art in connection with public performances,
promotional fliers, and T-shirts “for” Tool’s CDs, albums and DVDs, and that
those purposes were part of Tool’s general effort to develop, distribute,
exploit or exhibit its music. The court
also found that the allegations of loss of use of tangible property, which
constituted “property damage” weren’t caused by a covered “occurrence.”
Tool appealed, and the court of appeals reversed. Tool argued that the EIE was about the
creation of music, not collateral activities such as merchandising. AIC argued that merchandise was just one way
of exploiting Tool’s music, and because the advertising injury/property damage
occurred in the course of such efforts, e.g., to secure a merchandise contract
with Hot Topic, it wasn’t covered.
An insurer can’t escape its basic duty to defend by means of
an unclear exclusionary clause. Though
this exclusion was conspicuous (a separate page in a 171-page policy), it still
needed to be plain and clear, read as a layperson would read it. “Arising out of” is interpreted broadly when
it appears in a coverage clause, and narrowly in an exclusionary clause, in
order to protect the insured. The court
agreed with Tool’s argument that, if only a minimum connection to music were
needed, everything it does has such a connection, rendering the policy
illusory. AIC argued that the policy
wasn’t illusory because at least one conceivable claim would be covered: if
Tool’s former bassist sued Tool’s current bassist, alleging that the current
one defamed the former one on his personal Twitter account by stating that he
was too washed up to play for Tool, that would not arise from Tool’s
exploitation of its music and would be covered.
The court disagreed: “such a statement would fall within the [trial] court's
broad definition of being incidental to Tool's music.” AIC hinted that Tool
could have paid more for a broader policy, but that doesn’t make its
interpretation of this one
non-illusory.
Thus, the alleged advertising injuries arose from the
exploitation of Tool’s merchandise, not Tool’s music, for purposes of the
exclusion.
The policy also excluded injury arising out of publication
of material whose first publication took place before the beginning of the
policy period. The trial court found
that the allegation that De Leon created the works at issue between 1991-2002
created the potential that one of the works might have been first published
during the policy period, but AIC argued that the attached exhibits
conclusively established first publication prior to the policy period. Even if that were true, the defamation
allegations remained, establishing a potential for coverage. (Also, it can’t be the case that the date of
authorized publication (or creation, as alleged) is dispositive—it must be the
date of unauthorized publication by
the insured. Otherwise if someone gets a
policy in 2011 and then is sued for infringement, beginning in 2012, of a work first
published in 2000, the exclusion would apply.
But perhaps the court is just going quickly over this issue because it’s
not dispositive and AIC’s real argument is that all the infringement allegedly started before the policy period.)
6 comments:
Thank you so much for this breakdown of the legal issues at play. This is the only detailed description of what's happening (and why) that I've been able to find, and I'm really grateful that you've posted it in such clear language.
If the court rules in Tool's favor, what will AIC be responsible for? Damages? Legal costs?
If the court rules in AIC's favor, what will the outcome be for Tool?
Thanks!
Adam
I haven't been following the case so I don't know if there have been further developments. It depends on the insurance policy, but generally if Tool secured coverage then AIC would be required to pay for its defense and any damages/settlement of the covered claims up to the policy amount. If Tool didn't secure coverage, Tool will have to pay for its defense itself.
Thanks for the update.
Will either party be responsible for the fees of the other party in the current suit?
Without looking at the insurance contract, it's impossible to tell what happens if Tool loses on coverage. If Tool wins coverage, then it will likely be reimbursed its costs of seeking coverage, subject to rules about how much was reasonable to spend on this case.
I know that I'm here years after this has been written so we'll see if I get an answer, but can anyone tell me where to find a copy of the original claim by DeLeon? I need it for a copyright law class project. I've been able to find copies of the spin off insurance cases but I haven't found the original claim/case.
Your best bet is to contact the lawyers, if you can find them; Tool's lawyers at least should be listed on the documents for the insurance claims. If DeLeon is still around, that's also an option, though litigants can be sensitive about their past claims (I have no idea whether he ultimately prevailed).
Post a Comment