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Courthouse Steps

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

Recently filed cases in entertainment law, straight from the steps of the Los Angeles Superior Court.

Features

Counsel Concerns Image

Counsel Concerns

Anthony Lin

Issues in serving as a lawyer in the entertainment industry. This month:<br>A federal district court in Manhattan sanctioned a lawyer and his client for pursuing in bad faith claims against the company that holds the rights to the work of Edgar Rice Burroughs, the creator of Tarzan.

Features

Decision of Note: <b>Film Loan Suit Will Remain In Louisiana</b> Image

Decision of Note: <b>Film Loan Suit Will Remain In Louisiana</b>

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

The U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana denied motions to dismiss or to transfer a film loan dispute to California.

Features

Cameo Clips Image

Cameo Clips

ALM Staff & Law Journal Newsletters

Recent cases in entertainment law.

9th Circuit's Acceptance of 'Melodic Reduction' May Change Music Infringement Litigation Image

9th Circuit's Acceptance of 'Melodic Reduction' May Change Music Infringement Litigation

Michael T. Mervis & Robyn S. Crosson

In recent years, courts have frequently dismissed music copyright infringement cases at the summary judgment stage, finding that the plaintiff failed to raise a triable issue of fact concerning the claimed similarity between the allegedly infringed and infringing songs. In a number of cases, the court found the opinion of similarity offered by the plaintiff's expert musicologist ' usually a music professor or otherwise credentialed music scholar ' to be legally deficient or otherwise irrelevant to the applicable legal standards. <br>However, a decision earlier this year from Ninth Circuit appears to have expanded the net of music copyright infringement cases that may survive summary judgment. In <i>Swirsky v. Carey</i>, the court found that a type of expert musicological analysis, commonly called "melodic reduction," can raise a triable issue of fact concerning similarity. This article will explain melodic reduction and the problems that the <i>Swirsky</i> decision and melodic reduction may pose for defendants in music copyright infringement cases.

Features

Aggregator Deals With Online Music Services Image

Aggregator Deals With Online Music Services

Christian L. Castle

In Part One, the author discussed the emergence of content aggregators and began listing the issues to watch out for when contracting with one. Part Two continues that list of the major points of an aggregator agreement.

The Retail Debtor's 'Year in Review' Image

The Retail Debtor's 'Year in Review'

Adam Rogoff & Deborah Piazza

Welcome to the most magical time of a retailer's year -- the Holiday Selling Season. It seems fitting as retailers enter this "make-it-or-break-it" period that we examine the Retail Debtors' Year in Review. After all, if Santa is kind to bankruptcy professionals, a few retailers currently holding on will go down the ... chimney. If 2004 provides any indication as to how some courts are approaching issues affecting retailers, various courts were anti-vendor in special relief; pro-contract party regarding assumption and assignment issues; and, when it comes to the asset-disposition auction process, it is anybody's game!

Asbestos and Mass Tort Claims Image

Asbestos and Mass Tort Claims

Domenic E. Pacitti & Kathleen P. Makowski

Asbestos-related bankruptcies are prevalent for various reasons, including expense of traditional tort litigation, lack of either state or federal procedures to handle mass litigation, disputes between insurer and insured, and need for many companies' creditors and shareholders to achieve certainty with large current and contingent asbestos liabilities. Bankruptcy remains an attractive alternative and sometimes last resort because section 524(g) of the Bankruptcy Code provides a mechanism for companies faced with overwhelming asbestos liability to resolve current and future asbestos claims by channeling them to a trust, thereby allowing the effected company to avoid what could result in an inevitable liquidation. One necessary component of this channeling mechanism is section 524(g)(4)(B)(i) of the Bankruptcy Code which requires the Bankruptcy Court appoint "a legal representative for the purpose of protecting the rights of persons that might subsequently assert [asbestos claims] ..." 11 U.S.C. ' 524(g)(4)(B)(i), commonly referred to as a future claimants' representative (FCR).

Features

The Effects of Terminating a Pension Plan in Bankruptcy Image

The Effects of Terminating a Pension Plan in Bankruptcy

Claudia Z. Springer & Daniel A. Zazove

Oftentimes, one of the largest commitments of a company is its ongoing funding obligations under its pension plan. Contribution obligations to a company-sponsored pension plan will often influence the timing of a financially troubled company's bankruptcy filing. An example of this is the Chapter 11 case of United Air Lines (United) and its affiliates. United viewed its obligations to make significant contributions to its pension plans as somewhat incompatible with its need to create a fiscally strong enterprise so as to effectively compete with low- cost carriers that do not have the same economic burdens.

The Quiet Before the Storm: Fortifying the Landlord's Position Before the Tidal Wave of Tenant Bankruptcy Image

The Quiet Before the Storm: Fortifying the Landlord's Position Before the Tidal Wave of Tenant Bankruptcy

By Lee Collins

After the signing of the lease, the last thought entering the landlord's consciousness is that its new tenant is going to file for bankruptcy protection during its tenancy. In the beginning stages of the relationship between landlord and tenant, there is a brief period of shared optimism about the future and the joint prosperity that the new union is bound to offer.

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