Woody Allen v. William Faulkner: Fair Use?

April 20, 2013

A lawsuit filed by William Faulkner’s heirs over a quote in the Woody Allen film “Midnight in Paris” has been scheduled for trial April 7, 2014, in U.S. District Court in Oxford, Mississippi.

bigstock-LOS-ANGELES--JUN---Woody-A-33980012The Faulkner estate sued Sony Pictures Classics Inc. in October 2011, saying the company infringed on copyright when actor Owen Wilson slightly misquoted a line from Faulkner’s “Requiem for a Nun.”

In the film, the Wilson character says: “The past is not dead. Actually, it’s not even past. You know who said that? Faulkner. And he was right.”

In “Requiem for a Nun,” the Faulkner passage reads: “The past is never dead. It’s not even past.”

Sony does not think it violated copyright law. Sony says the quote is “fair use,” a legal term meaning the user doesn’t have to license or pay for it.

“This is a frivolous lawsuit and we are confident we will prevail in defending it,” a Sony Pictures spokeswoman said in a written statement when the suits were filed.

The author’s literary estate is also suing Northrop Grumman Corp. and The Washington Post Co. for using another Faulkner quote in a newspaper ad by the defense contractor. This second lawsuit, filed in Jackson, Mississippi, makes similar claims about the ad, which used a passage from a 1956 essay Faulkner wrote in Harper’s Magazine. The quote, which says in part “We must be free not because we claim freedom, but because we practice it,” was the conclusion to an essay criticizing the South’s response to school integration.

Northrop Grumman and Washington Post declined comment at that time.

David Olson, a Boston College law professor who specializes in patent law and copyright, said when the suits were filed that he agrees that the estate is over-reaching legally.

Lee Caplin, who represents the estate, disagrees. He said these are the first lawsuits it has ever filed. Caplin said that the estate recently licensed a quote to the sitcom “Modern Family.” He contrasted that to Allen’s use of the quote in the movie.

“He just wanted to kind of take it and he felt entitled,” Caplin said of Allen.

Caplin said the suit is not a “money grab.” He said Sony was dismissive of his attempts to license the quote after the movie came out.

Under the fair use principle, people can take and reuse part of a copyrighted book, song or movie without permission. Generally, excepts can be used if they’re short and if they’re part of a new artistic work, scholarly work or a parody. Noncommercial uses are generally more permissible, Olson said.

“If it’s for a commercial use, they do have to pay for it,” Caplin said.

Olson, though, said that’s a flawed understanding of copyright law. “Commercial use isn’t presumptively unfair,” he said. He said no one watches “Midnight in Paris” as a substitute for buying “Requiem for a Nun.”

“The Faulkner estate’s interest is not being harmed in any way,” Olson said. “If anything it draws a little more interest.”

Caplin argued that even though the movie snippet is short, it’s a key summing-up of the whole film, and that Allen took it because Faulkner said it better. “This is Mr. Faulkner’s most famous quote,” Caplin said.

In the Northrop case, Caplin said he’s not sure the heirs would have wanted Faulkner’s name to be associated with an arms manufacturer.

Olson said the Northrop case may be stronger, but he fears that authors are using copyright to limit the political context in which works are quoted or used.

Olson said some estates are zealous about enforcing copyright, to increase revenue or limit discussions that heirs find disagreeable. The suits could just be warning shots by the estate to other users.

“Part of what they could be doing is just trying to get the word out,” Olson said.