The CASE Act of 2019: Establishing a Small-Claims Process for Copyright Disputes




Legal Sidebari

The CASE Act of 2019: Establishing a Small-
Claims Process for Copyright Disputes

November 27, 2019
On October 22, 2019, the House passed H.R. 2426, the Copyright Alternative in Small-Claims
Enforcement (CASE) Act of 2019 by a vote of 410-6. Several Members have introduced an identical bill
(S. 1273) in the Senate, which the Senate Judiciary Committee reported favorably on September 12, 2019.
The CASE Act seeks to help copyright holders enforce lower-value claims by establishing a Copyright
Claims Board to resolve copyright disputes with damages totaling less than $30,000. This Sidebar reviews
the enforcement issues that the CASE Act seeks to address, describes the provisions of the CASE Act, and
analyzes the legal concerns that some scholars and stakeholders have raised about the legislation.
Challenges to Enforcing Lower-Value Copyright Claims
Copyright law grants creators of original works of authorship (e.g., books, movies, photographs,
computer code, and visual art) a set of exclusive rights in their works, such as the right to reproduce,
distribute, perform, and display the work, or prepare derivative works from it. Anyone who takes one of
those actions without the permission of the copyright owner—subject to certain exceptions, such as fair
use—
is a copyright infringer and potentially legally liable. Once a copyright is registered, the copyright
holder may sue in federal court to obtain legal relief from the infringement, including judicial injunctions
(i.e., a court order to cease infringement) and monetary damages.
Copyright cases are an area of exclusive federal jurisdiction—that is, litigants must bring copyright
lawsuits in federal (not state) courts. Federal litigation can be costly and is difficult to navigate without an
attorney’s assistance. The American Intellectual Property Law Association has estimated that the median
cost to litigate a copyright claim through appeal is $278,000. Although courts may award attorneys’ fees
and costs to prevailing parties in copyright suits (in addition to actual or statutory damages), such relief is
not available as a matter of course, but instead entrusted to the court’s discretion.
Many copyright stakeholders have therefore expressed concerns that the high costs of litigation deter
copyright holders from bringing meritorious lower-value copyright claims. In a 2013 report, the Register
of Copyrights (the Register), who heads the Copyright Office, found that “under the current federal
system lower-value copyright claimants face formidable challenges in seeking to enforce the exclusive
rights to which they are entitled.” The Register therefore recommended that Congress create a centralized,
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voluntary tribunal within the Copyright Office to handle lower-value copyright infringement cases.
Prompted by these concerns, the CASE Act thus aims to provide a lower cost and more efficient means of
resolving lower-value copyright disputes than traditional federal court litigation.
The CASE Act: Establishing the Copyright Claims Board as an
Alternative Dispute Resolution Forum

The Copyright Claims Board
The CASE Act would create a Copyright Claims Board (the Board) within the Copyright Office as an
alternative forum to resolve certain copyright claims. As envisioned by the Act, the Board would consist
of three full-time Copyright Claims Officers, appointed by the Librarian of Congress (the Librarian), who
would be attorneys with legal experience in either copyright law or alternative dispute resolution. The
Officers would serve in staggered, renewable six-year terms, and would be removable by the Librarian.
The duties of the Board would include: rendering determinations on claims and counterclaims filed with
the Board; facilitating settlement of such claims; managing proceedings before the Board; conducting
hearings and conferences as necessary; and awarding monetary relief to claimants and counterclaimants.
The Act provides that the Board would have nonexclusive jurisdiction, “on a voluntary basis,” over
claims of copyright infringement, claims for declarations of noninfringement, claims for
misrepresentations in takedown notices under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (concerning
infringing material on the Internet), and certain counterclaims related to the same transaction at issue.
Recovery would be limited to actual damages or statutory damages capped at $15,000 per work infringed
(or $7,500 for works not timely registered), with total recovery capped at $30,000, exclusive of fees and
costs. (By comparison, statutory damages of up to $150,000 per work for willful infringements are
available
in federal court, with no cap on total recovery.) Injunctive relief would generally not be
available, although the Board could include a “requirement to cease conduct” in its determination, if the
parties so agree. Attorneys’ fees and costs would only be available for “bad faith conduct.”
Adjudication Procedures Before the Board
To initiate a case before the Board, a claimant (i.e., the plaintiff) would file a certified statement of
material facts and pay a filing fee. After an initial screening of the claim, the claimant would proceed to
formally serve notice and a copy of the claim on the respondent (i.e., the defendant) within ninety days by
“personal service or pursuant to a waiver of personal service.” In addition, the Board itself would need to
provide written notice of the claim to the respondent.
Both the claimant’s service and the Board’s notice would inform the respondent that, by not “opting out”
of Board adjudication within sixty days of service, the respondent would lose the opportunity to have an
Article III court hear the claim, and would waive the right to a jury trial on the claim. If the respondent
choses to opt out of the proceeding through timely written notice to the Board, the Board would dismiss
the claim without prejudice, and the case would not proceed further before the Board. If the respondent
does not opt out, however, the case would proceed before the Board and the parties would be bound by
the Board’s determination.
Proceedings before the Board would be relatively informal, as compared to traditional federal court
litigation. Motion practice and discovery, for example, would be limited. The Board would be able to hold
hearings and receive evidence from the parties. Ultimately, a majority of the Board would make a
published, written determination resolving the claims and counterclaims, based on the applicable law and
factual findings under a preponderance of the evidence standard.


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Appeals of Board Determinations
Subsequent review of the Board’s determination would be limited. The usual standards for judicial review
of agency adjudications under the Administrative Procedure Act would not apply to the Board. Instead,
the parties could request reconsideration of the Board’s final determination; if the Board denied that
request, the Register could review the determination, but only for an abuse of discretion (i.e., an
unreasonable error) in denying reconsideration. Further review by an Article III court would be limited to
claims that: (1) the Board’s determination was based on “fraud, corruption, misrepresentation, or other
misconduct”; (2) the Board exceeded its legal authority; or (3) in the case of a default determination (e.g.,
when the respondent fails to respond to the claim), that the default was due to excusable neglect.
Does the CASE Act Raise Constitutional Concerns?
The CASE Act could lead to more efficient and less expensive resolution of certain lower-value copyright
claims. Efficiency, however, is not the only consideration at stake in a dispute resolution system. Some
commentators have raised concerns that a copyright small-claims adjudication system, depending on how
it is structured, may run afoul of various constitutional guarantees. In particular, some have raised
concerns regarding: (1) the Seventh Amendment; (2) Article III; (3) the Fifth Amendment’s Due Process
Clause; and (4) the Appointments Clause.
Right to Adjudication of Certain Suits in an Article III Court
Article III of the Constitution vests the “judicial Power of the United States” in the federal courts. Under
the CASE Act, the Copyright Claims Officers would not be appointed pursuant to, and subject to the
protections of Article III. That is, unlike federal judges, Copyright Claims Officers would not be
nominated by the President and confirmed by the Senate, nor guaranteed lifetime tenure “during good
Behavior.”
The Board would therefore be considered a non-Article III court (a.k.a. a legislative, Article I,
or administrative court).
Non-Article III courts generally may not adjudicate “any matter which, from its nature, is the subject of a
suit at the common law, or in equity, or admiralty.” However, non-Article III courts may adjudicate
matters involving “public rights,” which include (at a minimum) cases “which arise between the
Government and persons subject to its authority in connection with the performance of the constitutional
functions of the executive or legislative departments.” In 2018, for example, the Supreme Court held in
Oil States Energy v. Greene’s Energy Group that certain patent validity issues are public rights that may
be adjudicated in a non-Article III court (i.e., before the Patent Trial and Appeal Board). Because both
copyrights and patents stem from the same grant of constitutional authority, Oil States’ analysis would
likely inform whether Congress may constitutionally commit copyright validity or infringement
determinations to a non-Article III forum.
The Supreme Court’s “public rights” doctrine is not easily synthesized, and it is not entirely clear whether
the Court, under the line drawn in Oil States, would view copyright infringement (as opposed to
invalidity, which relates to the propriety of the government’s initial grant of the intellectual property right)
as a matter involving “public rights.” Notably, the decision in Oil States specifically stated that it did not
address whether “other patent matters, such as infringement actions, can be heard in a non-Article III
forum.” This dicta may suggest that the Court could be inclined to view patent or copyright infringement
issues as distinct from validity issues for Article III purposes.
Presuming that copyright infringement is a matter that must ordinarily be heard by an Article III court, the
more narrow question presented by the CASE Act is whether parties may voluntarily waive their
constitutional right to adjudicate that matter in an Article III court. In its 2015 decision in Wellness
International Network v. Sharif
, the Supreme Court made clear that the right to an Article III adjudication


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is “‘a personal right’ . . . ordinarily ‘subject to waiver.’” Specifically, Wellness International upheld the
ability of non-Article III bankruptcy judges to adjudicate certain private-right claims with the parties’
consent. In a slightly different context, the Court held that consent to a magistrate judge—another non-
Article III adjudicator—need not be express or written, but may be implied from a party’s conduct.
Even with the parties’ consent, however, the Supreme Court has at times suggested that a broad,
categorical
assignment of cases to non-Article III adjudicators may violate the structural protections of
Article III, if the underlying “congressional decision to authorize the adjudication of Article III business
in a non-Article III tribunal impermissibly threatens the institutional integrity of the Judicial Branch.” In
Commodity Futures Trading Commission v. Schor, the Court identified a number of factors to consider in
making that determination, including “the extent to which the non-Article III forum exercises the range of
jurisdiction and powers normally vested only in Article III courts, the origins and importance of the right
to be adjudicated, and the concerns that drove Congress to depart from the requirements of Article III.”
The Court has also considered whether the class of claims subject to non-Article III adjudication was
“narrow,” and the extent to which the non-Article III adjudicator is subject to the supervision and control
of Article III judges.
Because this multifactor inquiry is not governed by “formalistic and unbending rules,” it is difficult to say
definitively whether the CASE Act raises substantial structural Article III concerns. Certainly, the class of
claims that would be subject to non-Article III adjudication under the CASE Act could be described as
narrow. On the other hand, the Board would not be subject to Article III supervision to nearly the same
extent as the non-Article III adjudicators at issue in much of the Supreme Court’s case law, such as
bankruptcy, administrative law, or magistrate judges. As to the concerns that drove Congress to depart
from Article III, the fact that many of these lower-value copyright rights claims would rarely, as a
practical matter, b
e fully litigated in federal court, may be another factor the courts would consider.
Seventh Amendment Right to a Trial by Jury
The Seventh Amendment guarantees the right to a trial by jury in certain civil cases. The Supreme Court
has interpreted the Seventh Amendment to provide a right to a jury trial in “suits at common law” and
lawsuits “brought to enforce statutory rights that are analogous to common-law causes of action ordinarily
decided in English law courts in the late 18th century.” The Court has squarely held that copyright
infringement actions, at least when the plaintiff seeks actual or statutory damages, fall within the latter
category; thus, the parties are generally entitled to a jury trial in copyright cases under the Seventh
Amendment. As a result, if the CASE Act’s procedures were mandatory, the Act would likely be
unconstitutional, because it would compel defendants to forfeit their right to a trial by jury on copyright
infringement claims.
However, it is also firmly established that parties may waive their Seventh Amendment right to a jury
trial, so long as the waiver is knowing and voluntary. Under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 38(d), for
example, failure to make a written demand for a jury trial within a set time operates as a waiver of the
jury trial right. By analogy to Rule 38, the CASE Act’s opt-out system would appear to comport with the
Seventh Amendment, so long as the respondent’s waiver is knowing and voluntary.
Fifth Amendment Guarantee of Due Process
To some degree, many of the constitutional concerns with the CASE Act boil down to whether the opt-out
system that the CASE Act would create validly waives Seventh Amendment and Article III rights, in a
manner that comports with the Constitution’s guarantee of “due process of law.” In other words, does a
respondent’s failure to object to the jurisdiction of the Board within sixty days of service suffice to
establish a “voluntary” waiver of the respondent’s Seventh Amendment and Article III rights?


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Under the procedural aspects of the Due Process Clause, before an individual is deprived of life, liberty or
property by adjudication, he must be given notice and a meaningful opportunity to be heard. The due
process inquiry is generally a “flexible” one, with the level of process required varying “as the particular
situation demands.” In determining the level of process due, courts generally consider three factors:
(1) the private interests affected by the official action; (2) the risk of an erroneous deprivation under the
procedure used; and (3) the government’s interest, including the burdens that additional or substitute
procedural requirements would entail.
Although the details of the required notice to respondents under the CASE Act would be set out through
Copyright Office regulations, the bill makes clear that those regulations “shall include” a number of
requirements. These requirements, to a large degree, trace those of the service provisions in the Federal
Rules of Civil Procedure, which apply to traditional federal court litigation. For example, the CASE Act
would require that claimants effect service on an individual respondent using one of the same four means
of service allowed under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 4(e). As the Supreme Court has described
“[p]ersonal service of written notice within the jurisdiction” as “the classic form of notice always
adequate in any type of proceeding,” these notice procedures would appear sufficient, at least as a facial
matter, under the Due Process Clause.
The due process concerns raised by commentators have focused primarily on the effects for respondents
who fail to respond to this notice, as opposed to the form of the notice itself. Specifically, commentators
question whether the “opt-out process” for consenting to the Board’s jurisdiction is “voluntary enough” to
pass constitutional muster. By analogy, is it notable that the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure also attach
significant consequences to a failure to respond to proper service; in particular, a party who fails to
respond may be subject to a default judgment. In the class action context, moreover, the Supreme Court
has concluded that a procedure whereby absent class members who receive notice of the class action are
bound if they do not opt out of the suit, is consistent with the Due Process Clause. Indeed, Federal Rule of
Civil Procedure 23(b)
explicitly contemplates a similar opt-out procedure for certain federal class actions.
Of course, given the flexible nature of the due process balancing test and the distinct circumstances of the
CASE Act, it is difficult to say with certainty how a court would evaluate this due process argument.
The Appointments Clause
In light of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit’s recent decision that patent administrative
judges, who adjudicate certain patent validity challenges, were unconstitutionally appointed, a final
consideration is whether the Board’s structure accords with the Constitution’s Appointments Clause. The
Appointments Clause provides that the President “shall nominate, and by and with the Advice and
Consent of the Senate, shall appoint . . . Officers of the United States,” but “the Congress may by Law
vest the Appointment of such inferior Officers, as they think proper, in the President alone, in the Courts
of Law, or in the Heads of Departments.” The Clause thus distinguishes between “principal officers” of
the United States, who must be appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate, and inferior
officers, who may be appointed by, for example, heads of departments.
Under the CASE Act, the Librarian would appoint the Board’s Copyright Claims Officers, “after
consultation” with the Register. The Librarian, who is appointed by the President and confirmed by the
Senate, is considered to be a “Head of Department” within the meaning of the Appointments Clause. The
Librarian, in turn, appoints and supervises the Register. Copyright Claim Officers would serve “under the
general direction”
of the Register; however, they would render determinations in individual proceedings
“independently” and would not consult with the Register on the facts or application of the law in “any
particular matter.” The Librarian would have the general authority to sanction or remove Copyright
Claims Officers, but would be unable to “consider the substantive result of any individual determination”
in appraising their performance.


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The first issue in the Appointments Clause analysis is whether Copyright Claims Officers are “Officers of
the United States,” as opposed to mere federal employees. Appointees are generally considered “Officers”
if they “exercis[e] significant authority pursuant to the laws of the United States.” Although the Supreme
Court recently declined to elaborate on the meaning of “significant authority,” it has held, for example,
that administrative law judges and members of the Federal Election Commission are “Officers.” In the
intellectual property context, different U.S. Courts of Appeals have concluded that patent administrative
judges
and copyright royalty judges are officers under the Appointments Clause. Given that the Copyright
Claims Officers would be able to issue determinations binding upon the parties, including awards of
monetary damages up to $30,000, their legal authority could well be characterized as “significant.”
Presuming that Copyright Claims Officers are “Officers of the United States,” the second issue is whether
they are principal or inferior officers. Generally speaking, inferior officers are “officers whose work is
directed and supervised at some level by others who were appointed by Presidential nomination with the
advice and consent of the Senate.” In the principal-officer determination, courts also consider the level of
supervision
and oversight that presidential appointees exercise over the officer, and presidential
appointees’ power to remove the officer without cause. Unlike the comparable provisions for patent
administrative judges or copyright royalty judges (which have been held unconstitutional), Copyright
Claims Officers are generally removable by the Librarian and serve under the Register’s direction,
although there are some limits on the Librarian’s and Register’s oversight. So long as Copyright Claims
Officers are considered inferior officers, their appointment may be entrusted to the Librarian, consistent
with the Appointments Clause.


Author Information

Kevin J. Hickey

Legislative Attorney





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