Warner Chappell Music, Inc. v. Nealy/Opinion of the Court

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4518692Warner Chappell Music, Inc. v. NealySupreme Court of the United States

Notice: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the preliminary print of the United States Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of the United States, Washington, D. C. 20543, of any typographical or other formal errors, in order that corrections may be made before the preliminary print goes to press.

SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES


No. 22–1078


WARNER CHAPPELL MUSIC, INC., ET AL., PETITIONERS v. SHERMAN NEALY, ET AL.
ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
[May 9, 2024]

Justice Kagan delivered the opinion of the Court.

The Copyright Act’s statute of limitations provides that a copyright owner must bring an infringement claim within three years of its accrual. See 17 U. S. C. §507(b). In this case, we assume without deciding that a claim is timely under that provision if brought within three years of when the plaintiff discovered an infringement, no matter when the infringement happened. We then consider whether a claim satisfying that rule is subject to another time-based limit—this one, preventing the recovery of damages for any infringement that occurred more than three years before a lawsuit’s filing. We hold that no such limit on damages exists. The Copyright Act entitles a copyright owner to recover damages for any timely claim.

I

This dispute had its start in a decades-old, short-lived music venture. In 1983, Sherman Nealy and Tony Butler formed Music Specialist, Inc. That company recorded and released one album and several singles, including the works at issue. But the collaboration dissolved a few years later. And Nealy soon afterward went to prison for drug-related offenses. He served one prison term from 1989 to 2008, and another from 2012 to 2015.

Meanwhile, Butler (unbeknownst to Nealy) entered into an agreement with Warner Chappell Music, Inc. to license works from the Music Specialist catalog. And Warner Chappell found quite a few takers. One Music Specialist work (“Jam the Box”) was interpolated into Flo Rida’s hit song “In the Ayer,” which sold millions of copies and reached No. 9 on the Billboard chart. Use of that song was in turn licensed to several popular television shows, including “So You Think You Can Dance.” Other Music Specialist songs found their way into recordings by the Black Eyed Peas and Kid Sister.

In 2018, following his second prison stint, Nealy sued Warner Chappell for copyright infringement. Nealy alleged that he held the copyrights to Music Specialist’s songs and that Warner Chappell’s licensing activities infringed his rights. The infringing activity, Nealy claimed, dated back to 2008—so ten years before he brought suit. Nealy sought damages and profits for the alleged misconduct, as the Copyright Act authorizes. See §504.

For his claims to proceed, Nealy had to show they were timely. Under the Copyright Act, a plaintiff must file suit “within three years after the claim accrued.” §507(b). On one understanding of that limitations provision, a copyright claim “accrue[s]” when “an infringing act occurs.” Petrella v. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Inc., 572 U. S. 663, 670 (2014). So a plaintiff can complain about infringements going back only three years from the time he filed suit. If that rule governed, many of Nealy’s claims would be untimely, because they alleged infringements occurring as much as ten years earlier. But under an alternative view of the Act’s limitations provision, a claim accrues when “the plaintiff discovers, or with due diligence should have discovered,” the infringing act. Ibid., n. 4. That so-called discovery rule, used in the Circuit where Nealy sued, enables a diligent plaintiff to raise claims about even very old infringements if he discovered them within the prior three years. Nealy urged that all his claims were timely under that rule because he did not learn of Warner Chappell’s infringing conduct until 2016—just after he got out of prison and less than three years before he sued.

In the District Court, though, Nealy ran into a different timing objection, related not to his ability to bring suit but to his recovery of damages. Warner Chappell accepted that the discovery rule governed the timeliness of Nealy’s claims. But it argued that even if Nealy could sue under that rule for infringements going back ten years, he could recover damages or profits for only those occurring in the last three. The District Court agreed. Relying on a decision from the Second Circuit, the court held that even when claims for old infringements are timely, monetary relief is “limited” to “the three years prior to the filing” of the action. App. to Pet. for Cert. 26a (citing Sohm v. Scholastic Inc., 959 F. 3d 39, 51–52 (CA2 2020)). So Nealy could bring claims for infringing acts beyond that three-year period, but could not recover any money for them. Appreciating the impact of that ruling, the District Court certified it for interlocutory appeal. See App. to Pet. for Cert. 36a; 28 U. S. C. §1292(b).

The Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit reversed, rejecting the notion of a three-year damages bar on a timely claim. The court “assume[d] for the purposes of answering” the certified question that all of Nealy’s claims were “timely under the discovery rule.” 60 F. 4th 1325, 1331 (2023). And on that assumption, the court ruled, he could recover full damages. Allying itself with the Ninth rather than the Second Circuit, the court held that a plaintiff with a timely claim under the discovery rule may obtain “retrospective relief for [an] infringement” even if it “occurr[ed] more than three years before the lawsuit’s filing.” Ibid. (citing Starz Entertainment v. MGM, 39 F. 4th 1236, 1244 (CA9 2022)). “[T]he plain text of the Copyright Act,” the Eleventh Circuit stated, “does not support the existence of a separate damages bar for an otherwise timely copyright claim.” 60 F. 4th, at 1334. And imposing such a bar, the court reasoned, “would gut the discovery rule by eliminating any meaningful relief” for the very claims it is designed to preserve. Ibid.

We granted certiorari, 600 U. S. ___ (2023), to resolve the Circuit split noted above, and we now affirm the Eleventh Circuit’s decision.

II

The question on which this Court granted certiorari is “[w]hether, under the discovery accrual rule applied by the circuit courts,” a copyright plaintiff “can recover damages for acts that allegedly occurred more than three years before the filing of a lawsuit.” Ibid. That question, which the Court substituted for Warner Chappell’s, incorporates an assumption: that the discovery rule governs the timeliness of copyright claims. We have never decided whether that assumption is valid—i.e., whether a copyright claim accrues when a plaintiff discovers or should have discovered an infringement, rather than when the infringement happened. See Petrella, 572 U. S., at 670, n. 4. But that issue is not properly presented here, because Warner Chappell never challenged the Eleventh Circuit’s use of the discovery rule below. See supra, at 3; cf. Cutter v. Wilkinson, 544 U. S. 709, 718, n. 7 (2005) (“[W]e are a court of review, not of first view”). And as noted above, a division exists among the many Courts of Appeals applying a copyright discovery rule (11 at last count) about whether to superimpose a three-year limit on damages. See supra, at 3–4; Petrella, 572 U. S., at 670, n. 4; Pet. for Cert. 4. We therefore confined our review to that disputed remedial issue, excluding consideration of the discovery rule and asking only whether a plaintiff with a timely claim under the rule can get damages going back more than three years.[1]

The text of the Copyright Act answers that question in favor of copyright plaintiffs. The Act’s statute of limitations provides in full: “No civil action shall be maintained under the provisions of this title unless it is commenced within three years after the claim accrued.” §507(b); see supra, at 2. That provision establishes a three-year period for filing suit, beginning to run when a claim accrues—here, we assume, upon its discovery. And that clock is a singular one. The “time-to-sue prescription,” as we have called it, establishes no separate three-year period for recovering damages, this one running from the date of infringement. Petrella, 572 U. S., at 686. If any time limit on damages exists, it must come from the Act’s remedial sections. But those provisions likewise do not aid a long-ago infringer. They state without qualification that an infringer is liable either for statutory damages or for the owner’s actual damages and the infringer’s profits. See §504(a)(c). There is no time limit on monetary recovery. So a copyright owner possessing a timely claim for infringement is entitled to damages, no matter when the infringement occurred.

The Second Circuit’s contrary view, on top of having no textual support, is essentially self-defeating. With one hand, that court recognizes a discovery rule, thus enabling some copyright owners to sue for infringing acts occurring more than three years earlier. And with the other hand, the court takes away the value in what it has conferred, by preventing the recovery of damages for those older infringements. As the court below noted, the three-year damages bar thus “gut[s]” or “silently eliminate[s]” the discovery rule. 60 F. 4th, at 1333–1334; see supra, at 4. Or said another way, the damages bar makes the discovery rule functionally equivalent to its opposite number—an accrual rule based on the timing of an infringement.[2] As noted above, we do not resolve today which of those two rules should govern a copyright claim’s timeliness. See supra, at 4. But we reject applying a judicially invented damages limit to convert one of them into the other.

And we have never before proposed that course. The Second Circuit thought otherwise, relying on language in our Petrella decision to support a three-year damages cap. Sohm, 959 F. 3d, at 51–52. There we noted, as the Second Circuit emphasized, that the Copyright Act’s statute of limitations allows plaintiffs “to gain retrospective relief running only three years back from” the filing of a suit. 572 U. S., at 672; see id., at 677. Taken out of context, that line might seem to address the issue here. But in making that statement, we merely described how the limitations provision works when a plaintiff has no timely claims for infringing acts more than three years old. That was the situation in Petrella. Because the plaintiff had long known of the defendant’s infringing conduct, she could not avail herself of the discovery rule. Rather, she sued only for infringements that occurred in the three years before her suit. The defendant argued that she could not recover for even that much under the doctrine of laches, which protects against unreasonable delay in filing suit. We rejected that doctrine’s application, explaining that the Act’s limitations provision already “takes account of delay” by—here is the language again—allowing the plaintiff “to gain retrospective relief running only three years back from” her suit’s filing. Id., at 672, 677. But we did not go beyond the case’s facts to say that even if the limitations provision allows a claim for an earlier infringement, the plaintiff may not obtain monetary relief. To the contrary: The plaintiff in Petrella could get damages “running only three years back” from filing because she could sue for infringements occurring only within that timeframe.

Nealy is in a different situation. He has invoked the discovery rule to bring claims for infringing acts occurring more than three years before he filed suit. And as we have explained, we took this case on the assumption that such claims may be timely under the Act’s limitations provision. See supra, at 4. If Nealy’s claims are thus timely, he may obtain damages for them. The Copyright Act contains no separate time-based limit on monetary recovery.

Accordingly, we affirm the judgment below.

It is so ordered.

  1. Disregarding the limit in the reformulated question, Warner Chappell’s briefing in this Court focuses almost entirely on the discovery rule itself. Compare Brief for Petitioners 15–41 and Reply Brief 1–18 (disputing the discovery rule), with Brief for Petitioners 41–44 and Reply Brief 19–21 (assuming the discovery rule’s existence). That choice is especially surprising given that Warner Chappell’s own petition for certiorari raised the broader discovery-rule issue only in a footnote, which acknowledged that the issue was not raised below and is not the subject of a Circuit split. See Pet. for Cert. 14, n. But even supposing Warner Chappell’s petition had urged us to opine on the discovery rule, our reformulation of the question presented should have put an end to such arguments. “The Court decides which questions to consider through well-established procedures; allowing the able counsel who argue before us to alter these questions or to devise additional questions at the last minute would thwart this system.” Taylor v. Freeland & Kronz, 503 U. S. 638, 646 (1992).
  2. Scholars have speculated about “exceptional case[s]” in which a copyright plaintiff could get some benefit out of a discovery rule even when combined with a three-year damages bar. 3 M. Nimmer & D. Nimmer, Copyright §12.05[B][2][c][ii] (2023). Suffice to say that assuming those cases exist at all, they are as rare as hen’s teeth.