Judge in Capitol v. Thomas Considers New Trial
Jay Maynard writes "The judge in Capitol Records v. Thomas said today he's thinking about granting a new trial because he may have committed a 'manifest error of law' in his jury instructions. He says that his instruction that simply uploading music to a P2P network without any proof that anyone actually downloaded it may conflict with a case in the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals that said 'infringement of [the distribution right] requires an actual dissemination.' Briefs are due by May 29, with oral argument July 1. The judge invited friend of the court briefs by May 29, as well." NewYorkCountryLawyer links to the Judge's order itself (PDF), in which the Judge notes that he may (in NYCL's words) "have overlooked controlling Eighth Circuit authority, the case of National Car Rental v. Computer Associates, which held that you can't have a violation of the 'distribution right' without an 'actual dissemination of copies or phonorecords.'" Update: 05/15 18:54 GMT by T : Note that while the linked story as well as Jay Maynard's summary use the term "upload," Thomas wasn't uploading the files themselves, only making them available.
I would add that:
the judge didn't just make an error. He made the error because Ms. Thomas's lawyer, who should have told the judge about the National Car Rental case, didn't, and because the RIAA's lawyers -- who had an obligation under the Code of Professional Responsibility to inform the judge about the National Car Rental case -- also didn't.
So I expect one angry judge on July 1st.
Interestingly the chief architect of the RIAA's legal behavior won't be able to be there July 1st, as that's the day he starts his new job as a state court judge in Colorado. So one of his clones will have to take the heat for this misconduct.
Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful