Guess Who Just Lost Another Lawsuit? If You Said Righthaven…

from the down-they-go dept

Short and sweet this time. Eric Goldman points us to the news that Righthaven has had yet another case dismissed in Nevada over the lack of standing. This ruling came from Judge Roger Hunt, the same judge who ruled on the first case (Democratic Underground) that determined that Righthaven never held the copyright to the material, and thus had no standing to sue. However, he also cites the other such ruling by Judge Philip Pro. Get used to this, because there will likely be a flurry of such rulings on pretty much all of the remaining Nevada cases. The same may be true in Colorado, but we still have to wait and see there.

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Companies: righthaven, stephens media

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Comments on “Guess Who Just Lost Another Lawsuit? If You Said Righthaven…”

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39 Comments
Crinkle Cut says:

Re: Re: SUE SUE SUE

It is time to start suing Stephens Media. They started this whole fiasco, and they need to be sued into the ground. They are a bunch of sleazy scammers, and the only good thing that can come of all this is for them to suffer massive financial losses.

Sell your stock if you have it. They are going down soon.

Anonymous Coward says:

Was the SAA and the assignment even in evidence here? If not, then should Judge Hunt just assume the same agreements are in effect without proof? Seems to me that he should have made sure the same agreements are controlling before simply assuming they are. They probably are, don’t get me wrong, but I think it’s incorrect for him to make that assumption.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

I read the opinion embedded above, and Judge Hunt does not explicitly say that the agreement and SAA that were controlling in the Democratic Underground case are in fact controlling here. He appears to be assuming that they are. The assumption may be factually correct, but I think it’s error to just make that assumption, if that’s what he’s doing. Do you agree that the judge shouldn’t just assume facts not in evidence? I should hope so.

Jason says:

Re: Re: Re: Re:

I’m just pointing out the irony of how your strawman argument argues against itself.

I suppose, if I had to think about it for more than an internet second, I would realize that without the SAA, then Righthaven would be lacking an SAA to prove up its right to the copyright claim, and if something else were the case, I can’t help but think that THEIR LAWYER might have put it in the OPPOSITION filed May 18, which the judge noted that he HAD considered, but maybe not.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Re:

I’m just pointing out the irony of how your strawman argument argues against itself.

I suppose, if I had to think about it for more than an internet second, I would realize that without the SAA, then Righthaven would be lacking an SAA to prove up its right to the copyright claim, and if something else were the case, I can’t help but think that THEIR LAWYER might have put it in the OPPOSITION filed May 18, which the judge noted that he HAD considered, but maybe not.

It’s not a strawman. Perhaps there was another assignment/SAA between Righthaven and Stephens. I don’t know. And if neither were in evidence, Judge Hunt doesn’t know either.

All I’m asking is a basic, simple question–a question that is very relevant–were the SAA/assignment documents in evidence?

If you don’t know, you don’t know. I certainly don’t know. Do you?

Jason says:

Re: Re: Re:3 Re:

Okay sanity check: if “neither were in evidence” then what in the heck is Righthaven doing suing on someone else’s copyright. See, as the plaintiff, they gotta prove up their basis for suit. If “neither were in evidence” then they don’t even have a suit.

“Perhaps there was another assignment/SAA between Righthaven and Stephens. I don’t know. And if neither were in evidence, Judge Hunt doesn’t know either.”

You’re right. It’s not a strawman. It’s the Wizard of Oz. Do you have any other fairy tale arguments we should seriously consider?

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:4 Re:

They filed suit, and they had the copyright registration. That registration gives them a presumption of ownership of the copyright. The only time they produced the actual assignment and SAA from Stephens was when ordered to by the court.

Your notion that they must have produced the assignment and the SAA in every case is just plain wrong. It’s not a “fairy tale argument.” It’s reality.

This is important because I don’t think they can just start dismissing Righthaven suits left and right on the standing issue if the documents that purportedly prove there’s no standing aren’t in evidence in each particular case. That’s my understanding of it.

Jason says:

Re: Re: Re:5 Re:

“They filed suit, and they had the copyright registration. That registration gives them a presumption of ownership of the copyright.”
You’re right.

“Your notion that they must have produced the assignment and the SAA in every case is just plain wrong.”
I’m wrong.

“This is important because I don’t think they can just start dismissing Righthaven suits left and right on the standing issue if the documents that purportedly prove there’s no standing aren’t in evidence in each particular case.”
I’m going to disagree with you and the judge here. If the judge finds good cause in the Democratic Underground case to review its impact on other cases before the same court for potential abuses, I think that’s sufficient for the court to decide on its own to consider that evidence.

HOWEVER, I’m thinking a much better step would’ve been issuing an order to show cause why it shouldn’t be dismissed so that once entered the evidence and any responsives could be heard in the present case. Fair enough?

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:4 Re:

You start with this:

“Perhaps there was …”

and end with a conclusion based on YOUR possible maybe assumption:

“Judge Hunt doesn’t know either.”

Waste of time, waste of air, you have raised NO valid point here. Try this crap in front of said judge and watch how fast you get smacked down.

Jason says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Re:

To be inordinately fair, that’s not the question he’s addressing. The question he’s sort of raising “is the SAA even part of THIS case?”. It’s kind of a juvenile strawman because obviously, if it’s not then either some other basis would had to have been proved up in order for Righthaven to continue, SOMETHING would’ve then been cited in the motion that resulted in this order, and if that didn’t match up, then Righthaven, would’ve probably included that in their opposition. Either way, the court has noted that both sides’ moving papers were considered.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Re:

Sorry about that. I’m just wondering if the same assignment and SAA that the judges used in the other two cases were actually in evidence here. They probably were. I just think it’s strange that Judge Hunt didn’t say they were, since his entire ruling is based on those two documents. I know there are several cases where only the assignment was in evidence, and in some cases neither the assignment nor the SAA were in evidence. I’m just wondering if they were in evidence here. That’s all. If nobody knows, then nobody knows. I could look it up, but I’m just being lazy.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

Should the judge have required Righthaven to provide another copy of the SAA, even though it was in fact entered into evidence in the other cases?

I’m no expert on evidence, but I think the answer is yes. Shouldn’t the document that the judge bases his ruling on actually be in evidence? I certainly think so, or at the very least, Righthaven should/could have stipulated that the same documents were used. Otherwise it seems like a reversible error to me.

Karl (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re: Re:

Otherwise it seems like a reversible error to me.

On appeal, it would most likely get remanded. Once remanded, the Judge Hunt would require Righthaven to produce the SAA – and then the court would dismiss the case again.

That’s assuming the appeals court doesn’t uphold Judge Hunt’s ruling in the first place.

Also, do you know for certain that the SAA is not in evidence? The judge did say “the standing issues in this case are the same.”

The rules of evidence in these cases follow state rules, not the Federal Rules of Evidence, and I have no idea what Nevada’s laws are. It’s entirely possible that Judge Hunt can use that evidence in this case, without it being introduced by the defendant.

PW (profile) says:

Defendants who settled

Seems like any defendants that previously settled with Rightshaven might have a case (if there’s enough of them, perhaps even a class action) to bring up against Rightshaven for fraud or something of the sort. After all, if Rightshaven tried to sue them (or extort them 😉 without having the rights necessary to do so, then doesn’t that constitute a violation of some fraud statute? Just wondering outloud.

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