Redbox Automated Retail LLC v. Universal City Studios LLLP

Redbox Automated Retail LLC v. Universal City Studios LLLP, Dist. Court, D. Delaware 2009 was a case before Robert B. Kugler concerning copyright misuse, antitrust, and tortious interference with contract.

Redbox Automated Retail LLC v. Universal City Studios LLLP
CourtUnited States District Court for the District of Delaware
DecidedAugust 17, 2009
Docket nos.1:08-cv-00766
Citation(s)2009 WL 2588748[1]
Holding
The court dismissed Redbox's copyright misuse and tortious interference with contract claims, but allowed the antitrust count to move forward.
Court membership
Judge(s) sittingRobert B. Kugler
Keywords
First-sale doctrine, Sherman Antitrust Act, Tortious interference

Redbox rents and sells DVDs through automated retail kiosks, and Universal Studios is a major movie studio. Redbox sued Universal on counts of copyright misuse, antitrust, and tortious interference with contract when Universal pressured Redbox to accept an agreement to only obtain titles from them after 45 days of initial DVD release. Universal pressured Redbox's distributors to stop providing titles to Redbox if Redbox did not accept this agreement. Universal did this to protect their profits, but since Redbox makes a majority of their profits within two weeks of DVD release, Redbox did not accept.

The court dismissed Redbox's copyright misuse and tortious interference with contract claims but allowed the antitrust count to move forward.

Background edit

Redbox is a company that rents and sells DVDs through over 35,900 automated retail kiosks[2] inside chain restaurants, grocery stores, and drug stores in American cities.[1] Universal Studios is a major movie studio that produces many of the titles that Redbox rents. Universal was concerned that DVD kiosks jeopardize their profits from DVD sales and rentals, so they pressured VPD and Ingram, two of Redbox's major film distributors, to stop distributing to Redbox unless Redbox signs a Revenue Sharing Agreement to only obtain DVDs directly from Universal and only after 45 days of initial DVD release. Since new release DVDs generate 30% of the total revenue for that particular title in Redbox's kiosks, Redbox did not sign the agreement as it would damage their profits.[1]

As a result, Redbox claimed that they could no longer obtain titles through VPD and Ingram. They also claim that they could not obtain these titles through Walmart and Best Buy stores because the stores would either impose a limit on how many DVDs can be purchased at a time, or not sell to Redbox personnel entirely.

Legal action history edit

In October 2008, two months after the Revenue Sharing Agreement was proposed, Redbox began to raise claims against Universal Studios. In response, Universal motioned to dismiss some complaints. Redbox amended their previous complaint, added and omitted facts, and added more claims against Universal. Universal motioned in favor of their previous motion. The Court ordered mediation, but mediation fails. Eventually, the Amended Complaint sounded in six counts: (1) copyright misuse; (2) antitrust violations under the Quick Look Doctrine; (3) antitrust violations under the Rule of Reason doctrine; (4) antitrust violations amounting to restraint of trade; (5) antitrust violations under Section 1 of the Sherman Act; and (6) tortious interference with contract.[1]

Opinion of the Court edit

Copyright misuse edit

Redbox asserts that Universal staged a boycott of sales of Universal DVDs to Redbox, which violates the first sale doctrine of Section 109(a) of the Copyright Act. The Court dismissed this assertion, because the claim of copyright misuse is unavailable to Redbox and is impertinent to the dispute. The Court claimed that copyright misuse is a defense and not a claim, so Redbox cannot raise such a claim.

Antitrust edit

The Court ruled that Redbox sufficiently pleaded Universal violated Section 1 of the Sherman Antitrust Act. The Court stated that Universal had convinced others to boycott Redbox in distribution of Universal DVDs, which damaged Redbox's ability to compete in the DVD rental and sales market. The Court was convinced that Universal's actions were anti-competitive in nature, and thus violated the Sherman Antitrust Act.

Tortious interference with contract edit

The Court dismissed Redbox's claim that Universal tortiously interfered with Redbox's contracts with DVD distributors VPD and Ingram. This is because the contracts between Redbox and its suppliers did not explicitly state that the suppliers must provide Universal DVDs to Redbox. The contracts merely obligate Ingram to "order DVD software from the studios at the pricing negotiated by Redbox".[1] Furthermore, Universal's contract with the distributors stated that "Distributor shall not sell to any account other than a retail account as verified by Universal."[1] Therefore, restricting the distributor's sale of Universal DVDs was in Universal's right.

Subsequent developments edit

On March 1, 2012, Redbox announced that it had agreed on a deal with Universal to offer DVDs 28 days after its initial release.[3] This deal was good through August 2014.

Redbox has had similar lawsuits and resolutions with other major film studios. Multimillion-dollar deals were signed with some studios that allowed Redbox to rent new release DVDs without delay, while deals with other studios have yet to be settled.[4][5]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Redbox Automated Retail LLC v. Universal City Studios LLLP (Dist. Court, D. Delaware 2009), Text.
  2. ^ "Facts".
  3. ^ Richard Lawler (March 1, 2012). "Redbox deal with Universal keeps DVDs, Blu-rays on 28-day delay through 2014". Engadget. Retrieved October 11, 2012.
  4. ^ Sophia Pearson and Phil Milford (August 19, 2009). "Coinstar's Redbox Sues Warner Unit Over Video Terms". Engadget. Retrieved October 11, 2012.
  5. ^ Brooks Barnes (September 6, 2009). "Movie Studios See a Threat in Growth of Redbox". New York Times. Retrieved October 11, 2012.