Anatomy of a Business Divorce– When the Dream Unravels, Who Gets Custody of the IP ??

This cautionary tale is a scenario that I have seen over and over in my law practice. Two creative people meet and become friends, a business develops, something happens, things go south, the friendship sours, a business unravels and litigation ensues. In fact, it happens so often, I thought I would relay the fictional story of Jack and Rob, both to lay out the legal issues that come up in the dissolution of a business and to provide some advice as to what they could have done differently.  If “Jack” were a real person, he would have relayed something like this sad (and completely avoidable) tale over a cup of lukewarm coffee at my office. Here’s Jack’s story:

Jack:   My old college roommate Rob and I started a website selling t-shirts with funny political slogans on them. I came up with the slogans and ideas for the cartoons that would go with each slogan. Rob is a talented artist so he would draw the designs. The business is called “Politically Speaking.” I came up with that name and trademarked it with me as the owner. I have also trademarked several of the names of our most popular shirts in my name as well, which Rob didn’t know about.  I paid for all of the trademarks with my own money and obtained them in my own name—well, rather I used the business’ checking account to pay the filing fees but paid it back with my own money. I am the tech-savvy guy so I created the website, wrote all the copy on it, and created a political blog to promote it. Rob did create some artwork and photography for the website and photographed the products. We were doing pretty well with this business and were both making a good living from it. We have a huge window of opportunity coming up with the 2012 presidential election and expected to grow the business about 25% over the next two years.

Even though we used to be best friends, we have now had a big falling out over our political differences. At first it didn’t bother me but now it really gets on my nerves. He’s an Obama supporter and I like Ron Paul (who Rob constantly ridicules). I also found out that Rob had used company funds to make a pretty big Obama donation without my knowledge or permission (at least I think it’s big–$2,500). I am furious about the donation and he is mad at me because he found out that I obtained the trademarks in my own name without telling him about it. We can’t get past our problems, have grown to hate each other and can’t possibly stay in business together. He says he owns our products because he designed them artistically. I say he doesn’t because I came up with the basic idea of each shirt, he just executed my ideas. I own the domain name for the website and I have all the passwords to access the site, including the emails that come in. I also maintain our customer list in a database that I created and maintain. I say the trademarks, website, database, and customer list are mine but he says it isn’t because his art work is used throughout the website and he designed the logos.

Because we used to be such good friends, we never had a lawyer draw up any contracts to control the operation of our business or anything like that so I say it’s every man for himself. While I’m willing to pay him half of the profit I make from selling off existing inventory and maybe a little something for the artwork on my website, I don’t think I have any further obligation to him after that. I want to lock him out of the website this weekend. Can I do that?

Me: Before I give you an answer on whether or not you can lock Rob out of the website, let me give you some ground rules that will control how this messy situation should be sorted out. First of all, even though there are no written agreements, it is not simply every man for himself. Whether you realized it or not, you and Rob most likely have formed an implied or de facto partnership and most states have a statute that controls how things should go when two business partners get “divorced.” While it will depend on your state’s particular partnership act and could be changed by facts unique to a particular situation, in general terms, the partners are deemed to own the partnership property on a pro rata basis; meaning, if you’ve got two partners, they own the partnership property on a 50/50 basis. And, when two partners dissolve the partnership, they take the partnership’s money and property and put it in a big basket, pay off any debts that the partnership has incurred, and split the value of what’s left.

So, the next question is: what makes up the partnership property in this partnership? Although you might not like this answer, I think that most of the items you’ve discussed here– the existing inventory, the trademarks, the website, the blog, the customer list, and the data base containing those names, likely constitute partnership property. As I’ll get to in a minute, the shirt designs may or may not be partnership property. If the designs aren’t partnership property, they more likely belong to Rob than to you.  Let’s address each of these one by one:

The Existing Inventory

I think there is little doubt that the existing product inventory belongs to the partnership. The purpose of your de facto partnership was to sell these shirts and most courts would find that in the absence of an agreement to the contrary, the shirts that you and Rob had manufactured and are currently selling are partnership property.

The Shirt Designs

The designs of these shirts would be protected by copyright law and we would have to look there to determine their ownership. From your description, it sounds like there is at least an argument that these designs were jointly created. You came up with the overall concept and the slogan and Rob contributed the design. Although, I must tell you that there is also a real possibility that the part you contributed may not be copyrightable, because ideas, short phrases, and titles generally aren’t copyrightable. So, depending on the particular facts of your contribution, you may or may not have jointly created the designs. If you jointly own the copyright, this piece of the puzzle is fairly straightforward because it would be simple to conclude that the partnership owns the joint copyright. If the part that you contributed is not copyrightable, the copyright would be owned by Rob alone. Is the copyright partnership property? While you might think the answer is automatically “yes,” based on the reasoning we applied to the inventory question above, the answer is more likely “no.” Ownership of a copyright can only be transferred in writing. This means that in the absence of a written assignment agreement (or even an informal email) evidencing Rob’s transference of the copyright to the partnership, he likely owns it rather than the partnership. While this sounds bad for you, at least you can argue that the partnership has an license to use the designs, but even this is a gray area.

The Trademarks

Not surprisingly, trademark law controls the ownership of the trademarks. While you obtained federal registrations for the marks and paid for those registrations, you may not own them by yourself. First of all, to obtain a trademark, you had to sign a sworn declaration that certified to the United States Patent and Trademark Office (the “USPTO”) that no one else had any right to the trademark other than you. That statement wasn’t necessarily true because you personally were not the one making use of the marks in commerce–the partnership was the entity using the marks. The partnership (and/or Rob) would have a decent argument that you breached your fiduciary duty to the partnership when you took the marks that it was using and secured them for yourself, possibly perjuring yourself before the USPTO to do so. While there are certainly circumstances that would justify one partner actually owning the marks and orally licensing them back to the partnership, since you did this without Rob’s knowledge, you would have a very difficult time establishing that as the case here. I believe its very likely that a court would ultimately determine that the trademarks belong to the partnership because it was the one actually using them in commerce. If this is the case, you would be entitled to treat your footing of the bill to obtain the registrations as either a partnership capital contribution or it could be treated as a debt to you personally from the partnership. At any rate, you probably don’t own these trademarks in your individual name.

While it is not a good fact that Jack snuck off and registered these trademarks without Rob’s knowledge, Rob is not entirely without fault either. It was likely a breach of Rob’s fiduciary obligation as well to make a political donation with company funds without Jack’s knowledge or permission.

The Website, Blog and Domain Name

Many of these same issues are at play as we determine the ownership of the website. Like the shirt designs, the content of the website would most likely be subject to copyright law. (We’ll assume for the purposes of this question that there is nothing patentable about the content on the website). You created the written content as well as the layout and structure of the website and blog. Because you are the one who shepherded the “idea” of the website and blog into a tangible, written form, you should own them, right? Not so fast. Rob has also contributed copyrightable matter like artwork and photography to the website, which gives him a copyrightable interest in it as well. It looks like you two might jointly own the website and blog.

I realize that you own the domain name and whether it is partnership property will depend on a factual analysis of the entire situation. Whether a court would deem the domain name itself to be partnership property, as distinct from the contents of the website, is something of an open question that can’t be definitively answered without more information. Did you purchase the domain name before or after the partnership was formed, did you purchase it using partnership funds? Did Rob know that you were purchasing it in your individual capacity:? Does the domain name contain the partnership’s trademarks? A court would analyze all of these factors to determine whether the domain name really belongs to you or the partnership.

The Customer Names and the Database in Which They Are Housed

The customer list almost certainly belongs to the partnership. These customers were acquired in the performance of the partnership’s business–selling shirts emblazoned with political cartoons and slogans. The customer list is an asset of the partnership and possibly even a trade secret of the partnership.

As for the database, if you created this database yourself and there is something sufficiently unique about the arrangement of the factual elements in the data base or you programmed code that runs the database, you could have a copyrightable interest in the database and/or the applicable software. If you own the copyrightable interest in the data base, it would probably not be partnership property absent a written assignment transferring that interest back to the partnership. If a court determines that you own a copyright interest in the database, the court could still determine that the partnership has an irrevocable implied license to use the database.

Bottom Line: Unless you have some evidence that Rob intends to get into the website and damage it in some way, do not lock him out. He is a joint owner of the website with you so you don’t have the right to lock him out and you would probably have liability for that act if litigation ensues. This brings me to my next point. Avoid litigation. I know that you are very angry with Rob but it is not in either of your best interest to litigate about these issues. Now that you know the basic lay of the land, you and Rob should sit down and come up with a fair and equitable way to divide these assets between you. Litigating over these issues will likely deplete whatever assets are left and jeopardize the ability of either of you to start over with a new venture. Work something out that is equitable, recognizing that neither of you will be entirely happy with the outcome. I can assure you that you won’t be entirely happy with what a judge decides either but at least you won’t have spend tens, if not hundreds, of thousands of dollars to get to the point of a decision that still doesn’t give you everything you want.

What Jack and Rob Should Have Done Differently

1.    First and foremost, Jack and Rob needed a written partnership agreement or, better yet, they should have formed an entity that gave them even more protection than a partnership would. Always seek legal advice from a good lawyer on the formation of a new venture to determine the business form that is most appropriate for what you are doing.

2.    The agreement should explicitly set out who owns what if it is different than pro rata joint ownership.

3.     The agreement should set out who is to do what work and how it is to be done so that there are no resentments spawned by the all too familiar martyr complex–i.e., “It’s not fair! I’m the one doing all the work!”

4.    The agreement should make clear that all intellectual property created before the formation of the legal entity is transferred from the individual to the legal entity. If this is not the intent of the people involved, at the very least the entity should have a license to use the property that sufficiently protects its ability to do business using the IP. The corporate entity and the individual transferring or licensing the IP should have separate legal counsel to ensure that an arm’s length transaction occurs.

5.         All creative work—the design of the shirts, the design of the website, the content of the website, the design and content of the blog, the design and content of the data base—should have been done pursuant to a work-for-hire agreement. A work-for-hire agreement makes it clear that the business entity, and not the individual doing the work (or any alterations to the work) owns the resulting copyright in the creative work  This is absolutely critical to a business based on intellectual property. You can head off years of expensive litigation and legal fees if you take this simple step on the front end of every project that will result in the creation or alteration of intellectual property.

6.         Don’t sneak off and do things behind your business partner’s back. This almost always will result in bad will and damage the relationship. The corollary to this rule is don’t go into business with someone that you don’t trust implicitly. Trust your gut instincts as to the character of your potential business partner. If anything gives you pause as to his or her integrity, walk away.

7.         The agreement should contain a roadmap that sets out how the entity will be dissolved and the property divided in the event that things don’t work out.

Bits and Bytes

How To Build A Tween Heartthrob. You need really good hair and a smart manager.

Vanderbilt bulks up its technology transfer group. These are the people charged with identifying, protecting and commercializing the inventions and technological advances made by Vandy doctors, scientists, and engineer, via the Nashville Post.

Facebook refuses to recognize the Irish village, Effin, deeming its name “offensive.” One Effin woman won’t take this sitting down. This blog proudly stands with all the Effin people.

Speaking of Facebook, Tennessee gangsters are using it to brag about their exploits and recruit new members.

The Supreme Court affirms the “clear and convincing” evidence standard to invalidate US patents.

Lawsuit Serves Up IP Lessons For Restaurateurs (and all businesses): 1) require your personnel to sign confidentiality agreements and non-competes; 2) Make sure you have policy manuals that clearly define procedures and expectations of your staff with regard to confidential information; and 3) If your recipes are confidential, limit access to those recipes. The same holds true with all your trade secrets. Mark them confidential and only reveal them to key employees on a need-to-know basis.

How To: Improve Your SEO With Twitter.

The 10 Most Overused LinkedIn Profile Buzzwords of 2011.

We are just kidding! Abercrombie Wants ‘Jersey Shore’ Star’s IP Suit Nixed, relying on the parody defense.

Judge allows auction of Righthaven copyright assets. Is it the beginning of the end for the so-called copyright troll?

Copyright Office Says No Copyright Protection for Exercise Routines

There is a lawsuit pending in California in which a yoga master is suing his former pupil and the pupil’s yoga company alleging that the pupil breached the terms of a license agreement that allowed the student to teach the master’s copyrighted “Bikram” yoga system.  The yoga master alleges in his complaint that he developed the Bikram system, which is comprised of 26 separate yoga positions and two breathing exercises in a precise order, and has promoted it since 1971. The plaintiff copyrighted his specific yoga program in 1978 and has only allowed it to be taught by others if they sign and adhere to his license agreement. The former pupil entered into the license agreement but his business, Yoga to the People, has since offered cheaper classes that don’t meet the requirements of the license under the name, “Traditional Hot Yoga.” The plaintiff sued in September and the defendants recently answered the complaint, denying any liability and arguing that “’Bikram methods’ are utilitarian systems, incapable of copyright or trademark protection. Further, there are no ‘Bikram postures.’ Each and every one of the yoga postures (or “poses” or “asanas“) used in Bikram Yoga classes was developed and recorded hundreds, if not thousands, of years ago, and are in the public domain.”

More importantly, the defendants’ answer also shed light on the copyright office’s current position as to whether exercise routines are protected as “choreography” under the Copyright Act.  The defendants attached a letter to their answer from the U.S. Copyright Office’s Performing Arts Division’s acting chief that confirmed that yoga exercise sequences no longer qualify as protectable choreography under U.S. Copyright law:

“Our general position with respect to exercise routines has changed in the last few years,” Acting Chief Laura Lee Fischer said in the letter. “Previously we took the position that although functional physical movements did not represent the type of authorship which Congress intended to be protected under the copyright law, we could register the selection and ordering of public domain exercises.”

But “more recently, we have had occasion to re-evaluate this position,” Fischer said. “Exercises, including yoga exercises, do not constitute the subject matter that Congress intended to protect as choreography. Thus, we will not register such exercises (including yoga movements), whether described as exercises or as selection and ordering of movements.”

This letter isn’t necessarily binding on the California federal court (and certainly doesn’t bode well for the plaintiff), but it does tell us the Copyright Office’s current position on whether a system of exercises is protectable or not: the answer is “no.”

The case is Bikram’s Yoga College of India LP et al. v. Yoga to the People Inc. et al., Docket No. 2:11-cv-07998, in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California.

Bits and Bytes

Wait, did Dunder Mifflin just became a real company? Here are 6 brands that went from fiction to reality.

Here we go again: a science fiction writer sues James Cameron and his production company claiming they ripped off the idea of the movie Avatar from him.

Procter & Gamble chose the name “Pringles” from a phone book. They liked the name of Pringle Drive in Finneytown, OH.

Gusto Records sues the Kingsmen, claiming they owe in excess of $200,000 dollars in royalties from the song, Louie Louie, which the FBI once believed was obscene and later determined was “unintelligible at any speed.”

How To: Keep Your Twitter Followers.

The producer of reality TV shows The Bachelor and The Bachelorette sues the spoiler website, www.realitysteve.com, alleging that it has offered money to members of the shows’ cast and crew to leak the details about upcoming episodes in violation of their confidentiality contracts and despite repeated warnings to stop.

Although they thought it was brilliant yesterday, today the folks at Forbes think that Amazon’s promotion for its price checking app was a rare blunder.

AT&T and the Justice Department agree to postpone the lawsuit over T-Mobile merger.

Supposedly fewer people went to the movies in the past two weekends than during the box-office coma that followed 9/11.

Bits and Bytes

Nashville’s Gibson Guitar heads back to court seeking the return of the Indian ebony wood seized by federal agents nearly two years ago. UPDATE: Hearing postponed at request of both sides.

Google+ launches face recognition technology. Don’t worry, you can opt out if you want to.

Amazon’s very clever move…If you use their price-checking app while in another retailer’s store, you get a discount if you order the item later on Amazon.

Tennessee joins 10 other states trying to collect sales tax on internet sales.

TN couple starts new website to help with adoptions: A Middle Tennessee couple has started a website to help would-be parents bring home their children.

Have the .xxx domain names been an obvious failure?

Humbled Netflix CEO is still thinking and talking big despite widespread agreement that the decisions made during the last five months or so have been something of a flop.

Greece and Macedonia Squabbling Over What Name Greece Calls Macedonia

You would think that Greece has bigger things to worry about but there is a lawsuit at the UN’s International Court of Justice (“ICJ”) stemming from the fact that Greece refuses to call Macedonia by the “correct” name. Macedonia claims that Greece broke an agreement between the two nations by blocking Macedonia’s entrance under its UN name into NATO and other international organizations. Macedonia’s UN or official name is “the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia.” Because Greece has its own province called “Macedonia,” it doesn’t want to recognize this name and instead calls Macedonia “TFYRM, ” an acronym for the official name. In a decision that came out of the ICJ this week, the UN agreed with Macedonia in the case but declined to order Greece to use the name and honor the earlier agreement. This dispute reminds me of many the argument I have mediated among my children….”He keeps calling me X!”

Bits and Bytes

Coca-Cola moves its top-secret formula from a bank vault for the first time in 86 years to a new vault at Coke’s Atlanta museum. Could this be a ploy to remove the recent branding disaster over the Christmas-themed Coke cans from the news?

Musicians who are not posting videos to Facebook are missing 60 million viewers.

An enterprising Nashville blogger stirs up a massive holiday cookie bake-off.

Congrats to Nashville’s 2012 ATHENA Award nominees.

Time’s Top 10 Everything of 2011.

Everything you need to know about the new Twitter. And, along these same lines, How To Use Twitter: A Simple Infographic & Slideshow for the newbie.

FindLaw doubles its Twitter followers in 90 days after buying “Who to Follow” designation on Twitter.  Just how much does a Twitter follower cost anyway?

Who Owns an Employee’s Twitter and Other Online Accounts?

Congressman Rick Larsen (D-Wash.) fires three staffers after they tweet about office drinking and their “idiot boss”.

Lawmakers release draft alternative to Stop Online Piracy Act .

How to Be a Social Media Power Influencer (And Why) – Forbes.

Apple Loses Right to Use iPad Name in China

Picture Apple Inc. lost an crucial bid in a Chinese court yesterday to reclaim its iPad name from a Chinese manufacturer who registered the iPad trademark in mainland China in 2001. The Municipal Intermediate People’s Court in Shenzhen rebuffed Apple’s claims that Hong Kong-based Proview Technology Shenzhen had infringed its iPad trademark, which Apple contends that it bought from Proview’s Taipei division in 2009, Xinhua News reported. The Chinese court held that there was no valid transfer of the name in China and that Proview, a unit of Hong Kong-based Proview International Holdings Ltd., lawfully registered the trademark in 2001 and continues to have the right to use it in mainland China. Oviously this is a significant blow because Apple views China as a critical market.

The iPad brand is having a bad run of luck. On December 2, 2011, a California judge refused to enjoin Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd. from selling touch-screen smartphones and tablets even though she found the devices may violate design and utility patents for Apple’s iPhone and iPad. Despite the fact that U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh held that Apple was likely to prevail on its patent infringement claims against Samsung’s Galaxy S 4G, Infuse 4G and Droid Charge phones and its Galaxy Tab 10.1 tablet, Apple was not able to convince her that it would suffer irreparable harm from the alleged infringement.

Bloggers are not Entitled to Same Protections as “Real” Journalists

Oregon Judge Marco Hernandez has ruled against Chrystal Cox, who bills herself as an “Investigative Blogger Exposing Corruption“, in a defamation action brought by the Obsidian Finance Group. Claiming a “confidential source” gave her the information that was the basis of the statements at issue, Cox believed that she was protected by Oregon’s Shield Law, which allows journalists to keep their sources a secret. Judge Hernandez, however, disagreed, ruling that the Shield Law is limited to traditional media (broadcast news, newspapers and magazines), adding that Cox has failed to show that she has any evidence of an education in journalism or “any credential of proof of any affiliation with a recognized news entity.” Without the protection of the Shield Law, the claims will progress and she faces a potential $2.5 million judgment. Ms. Cox plans to appeal.

This is the second recent ruling that threatens digital journalism and anonymity. In June, the New Jersey Supreme Court ruled that online discussion forum postings by journalists are not covered by New Jersey’s Shield Law. The Court did not believe that the protections were intended to cover any statement posted on-line, otherwise, everyone with a Facebook account could claim the protections afforded to journalists. The bottom line: Bloggers can’t count on keeping their sources confidential, which should enter into the calculus of what they are willing to say online if liability is a concern.

Bits and Bytes

Memphis cops are valiantly fighting crime using….smartphones.

Twitter introduces what is supposedly a simpler new design today.

Department of Justice confirms the launching of an antitrust probe into the pricing of e-books. Was there improper collusion between publishers and Apple to prevent discounting?

“Like My Status” was Facebook’s breakout meme of 2011. There are some advantages to having teenagers because I already knew these. Here are Facebook’s most popular status topics of 2011 as well.

The news keeps getting worse for RIM: the mobile phone maker was forced to change the name of its mission critical next generation mobile platform after losing a trademark case in Albuquerque, New Mexico. “BBX” is out, “Blackberry 10” is in.

Sadly, Barbara Orbison, the widow of rock-and-roll great Roy Orbison, passed away from pancreatic cancer in Los Angeles the day before yesterday, which was the 23rd anniversary of her husband’s death. Ms. Orbison’s Nashville-based music publishing company, Still Working Music, was recently awarded BMI’s 2010 Song of the Year for Taylor Swift’s “You Belong With Me”. Ms. Orbison shrewdly ran Still Working from all over the world and was able to spot and sign successful and talented songwiters, like  Liz Rose, Billy Burnette and Tommy Lee James — all of whom scored  with No. 1 hits for various country artists.

Mike Jameson, the former Metro Councilman and sitting General Sessions Court judge, will face competition from attorneys Rachel Bell and Jack Byrd in the Democratic Party primary in March.