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Case :0-cv-00-GAF-AJW Document 0 Filed 0/0/00 Page of 0 LOUIS A. KARASIK (State Bar No. 0) SAMUEL C. TAYLOR (State Bar No. 0) CASONDRA K. RUGA (State Bar No. ) ALSTON & BIRD LLP South Hope Street, Sixteenth Floor Los Angeles, California 00 Telephone: () -00 Facsimile: () -0 lou.karasik@alston.com sam.taylor@alston.com casondra.ruga@alston.com Attorneys for Plaintiff TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX FILM CORPORATION TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX FILM CORPORATION, Plaintiff, v. UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT CENTRAL DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA WARNER BROS. ENTERTAINMENT, INC.; WB STUDIO ENTERPRISES, INC.; WARNER BROS. PICTURES and DOES, Warner Bros.. Case No. CV 0-0 GAF (AJWx) [Honorable Gary A. Feess] PLAINTIFF S APPLICATION FOR PERMANENT INJUNCTION AND REQUEST FOR BRIEFING SCHEDULE [Appendix of Authorities filed concurrently herewith] Filing Date: February, 00 Trial Date: January 0, 00 Discovery Cut-off: December, 00

Case :0-cv-00-GAF-AJW Document 0 Filed 0/0/00 Page of 0 I. INTRODUCTION Plaintiff Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation ( Fox ) and defendants Warner Bros. Entertainment, Inc., WB Studio Enterprises, Inc. and Warner Bros. Pictures (collectively, Warner Bros. ) have submitted a Stipulation Re Proceedings Following December, 00 Order whereby the parties have agreed that the next proceeding in this matter should be the Court s determination of the permanent injunction issue related to Fox s claim for infringement of the distribution right. To that end, Fox has agreed to waive injunctive claims for non-distribution infringement and both parties have agreed that trial, if any, of any remaining damages claims shall only proceed after any appeal of this Court s injunction determination is resolved. By this Application, Fox requests that the Court grant a permanent injunction restraining Warner Bros. from distributing the Watchmen picture, and any other work based on Watchmen source material, as detailed more fully below. In addition, because the parties have widely different views about how to proceed with respect to the injunction hearing scheduled for January 0, 00, Fox asks the Court to provide guidance for an orderly briefing and hearing process. As detailed below, Fox proposes that both parties be directed to brief the Court on the relevant legal standard for deciding the injunction issue, that any disputed facts relevant to the injunction issue be identified, and that the conduct of any evidentiary hearing necessary to resolve the injunction question be determined by the Court once the disputed facts, if any, are identified. While this Application is not intended as a substitute for a full briefing of the legal standards applicable to the permanent injunction issue, Fox provides a summary of the key issues so that the Court can further evaluate Fox s position that there are no material disputed facts underlying Fox s request for injunctive relief and that the only remaining questions involve application of well settled legal standards for issuance of permanent injunctive relief in cases of copyright infringement.

Case :0-cv-00-GAF-AJW Document 0 Filed 0/0/00 Page of 0 II. APPLICATION FOR PERMANENT INJUNCTION Fox hereby applies for a permanent injunction restraining Warner Bros., together with its co-financers, co-distributors, partners, affiliates, licensees and other agents or parties claiming distribution rights from Warner Bros., from distributing and releasing the Watchmen picture produced by Warner Bros., together with all other works based on Watchmen source material, whether in DVD format, home video or any other form of media, in movie theatres, the Internet, and all other venues. III. FOX S REQUEST FOR ORDERLY BRIEFING Fox s position is that the Court should proceed as follows: (a) order the parties to file briefs on the legal standard for deciding whether Fox is entitled to an injunction; (b) require the parties to identify factual disputes, if any, that require resolution by the Court before deciding the injunction issue; and (c) establish the procedures for conducting the injunction hearing, including determination whether any live witnesses are necessary. Fox proposes that the legal briefs be filed by January, 00; that the parties joint submission of factual disputes, if any, be filed by January ; and that the Court conduct a pre-hearing conference on January to make final determinations on the conduct of the hearing on the 0 th. Further guidance from the Court on these matters is important to prevent what might otherwise be a completely unnecessary and unstructured evidentiary hearing where Warner Bros. seeks to introduce evidence on matters completely irrelevant to the injunction issue or not in dispute, including issues already adjudicated by this Court in the summary judgment order. As detailed below, Fox submits there are no material facts in dispute which require an evidentiary hearing. Warner Bros., on the other hand, has proposed a -day evidentiary hearing that would involve scores of witnesses who would testify about the meaning and effect of the Largo Agreement, Warner Bros. and Paramount s qualifications to distribute theatrical pictures in domestic and foreign territories, respectively, and the expenses incurred by Warner LEGAL0/v

Case :0-cv-00-GAF-AJW Document 0 Filed 0/0/00 Page of 0 Bros. to produce the Watchmen picture. Such matters are irrelevant to the Court s resolution of the injunction question, and Fox is prepared to stipulate to the terms of the Largo Agreement, to Warner Bros. and Paramount s qualifications to distribute and to the expenses either or both incurred in connection with the production of the picture. The parties diverging views over what further proceedings are required to resolve the injunction issue stem, no doubt, from competing views about the relevant legal standard for injunctions in copyright cases. Fox briefly states its position on that issue with an eye toward identifying whether any factual disputes remain that are material to the injunction question. IV. THE STANDARD FOR DECIDING PERMANENT INJUNCTIONS IN COPYRIGHT CASES AFTER EBAY Warner Bros. has represented to this Court that irreparable injury is no longer presumed in copyright cases after the Supreme Court s decision in ebay Inc. v. MercExchange, L.L.C., U.S. (00), and that ebay dramatically changes the principles under which the Court must decide the injunction issue. Warner Bros. is wrong, and its position in this case is contrary to the position Warner Bros has taken, and other Courts have adopted, in copyright infringement cases post-ebay. Under the traditional four-part test described in ebay, irreparable injury continues to be presumed in copyright infringement cases like this one, and in any event, the undisputed facts of this case reveal clear irreparable injury if Warner Bros. were permitted to distribute the Watchmen picture and other works based on Watchmen For example, Warner Bros. wants to call 0 s era witnesses such as Lyman Gronemeyer (Fox counsel) and Stuart Rosenthal (who assertedly negotiated the Largo Agreement for Largo) to testify about the Largo Agreement, even though the terms of that agreement are not in dispute and no such testimony is needed from either of these gentlemen for the Court to decide the irreparable injury question. This was Warner Bros position at the hearing on Fox s motion to bifurcate liability and damages. As the issue was not yet before the Court, Fox did not address the standard under e-bay at that time, and the Court did not decide the issue.

Case :0-cv-00-GAF-AJW Document 0 Filed 0/0/00 Page of 0 source material. A. Irreparable Injury is Presumed in this Case Contrary to Warner Bros. representations to this Court, ebay has no language suggesting that the presumption of irreparable injury in copyright cases has been abrogated. Rather, ebay determined that the Federal Circuit s adoption of a general rule, unique to patent disputes, that a permanent injunction will issue once infringement and validity have been adjudged overstated the traditional four-part test. ebay Inc., U.S. at - (citations omitted). The Court also criticized the District Court s conclusion that a plaintiff s willingness to license the patented technology for a fee, i.e., the availability of money damages for use of the technology, defeated a showing of irreparable injury. Id. at. The problem with both the District Court and Federal Circuit s approach was that they did not consider the traditional four factor test, which includes the question of irreparable injury. Id. Supreme Court nowhere states that irreparable injury is not presumed in patent or copyright cases. The The concurring opinions in ebay emphasize that application of the fourpart test is not intended to write a clean slate for District Court s exercising their discretion to grant injunctive relief in infringement cases. Chief Justice Robert s concurring opinion (joined by Justices Scalia and Ginsburg) makes this clear: From at least the early th century, courts have granted injunctive relief upon a finding of infringement in the vast majority of patent cases. This long tradition of equity practice is not surprising, given the difficulty of protecting a right to exclude through monetary remedies that allow an infringer to use an invention against the patentee's wishes-a difficulty that often The four-part test under ebay is this A plaintiff must demonstrate: () that it has suffered an irreparable injury; () that remedies available at law, such as monetary damages, are inadequate to compensate for that injury; () that, considering the balance of hardships between the plaintiff and defendant, a remedy in equity is warranted; and () that the public interest would not be disserved by a permanent injunction. ebay Inc., U.S. at. LEGAL0/v

Case :0-cv-00-GAF-AJW Document 0 Filed 0/0/00 Page of 0 implicates the first two factors of the traditional four-factor test. This historical practice, as the Court holds, does not entitle a patentee to a permanent injunction or justify a general rule that such injunctions should issue.... At the same time, there is a difference between exercising equitable discretion pursuant to the established four-factor test and writing on an entirely clean slate. Discretion is not whim, and limiting discretion according to legal standards helps promote the basic principle of justice that like cases should be decided alike. [citations omitted]. When it comes to discerning and applying those standards, in this area as others, a page of history is worth a volume of logic. [citations omitted]. Id. at. Similar sentiments are expressed in the concurring opinion by Justice Kennedy (joined by Justices Stevens, Souter and Breyer): To the extent earlier cases establish a pattern of granting an injunction against patent infringers almost as a matter of course, this pattern simply illustrates the result of the four-factor test in the contexts then prevalent. The lesson of the historical practice, therefore, is most helpful and instructive when the circumstances of a case bear substantial parallels to litigation the courts have confronted before. Id. at. With no less than seven Justices expressing the view that historical practice for granting injunctive relief continues to hold sway in applying the four-part test, it is not surprising that, following ebay, the Courts continue to find that irreparable injury is presumed in copyright cases, as it has been for decades, where the question is whether a party holding copyright interests is injured by the defendant s unauthorized release or distribution of a work Indeed, when Warner Bros. is the plaintiff seeking to enforce its copyrights interests, Warner Bros. itself has taken exactly this position.

Case :0-cv-00-GAF-AJW Document 0 Filed 0/0/00 Page of 0 Thus, in Warner Bros. Entertainment, Inc. vs. RDR Books, F.Supp.d (S.D.N.Y. 00) Warner Bros. (the same company who is a defendant here) sought to protect Warner Bros. valuable copyright interests in the Harry Potter works by suing to enjoin defendant from marketing or selling its planned book "The Harry Potter Lexicon." In a brief filed by Warner Bros. two years after e-bay was decided, Warner Bros. argued that Courts routinely hold that... copyright infringement gives rise to a presumption of irreparable injury. See, e.g., ABKCO Music, F.d at (a primafacie case of copyright infringement supports a presumption of irreparable harm)... As Plaintiffs have clearly demonstrated a likelihood of success on the merits of their copyright... infringement claims, irreparable injury may be presumed. (Warner Bros. Memorandum of Points and Authorities in Support of Motion for Preliminary Injunction, p., emphasis added.) Warner Bros. argument was adopted by the District Court when it granted the injunction requested by Warner Bros. in an opinion concluding that this result was appropriate after ebay. The Court held: Because Plaintiffs have demonstrated a case of copyright infringement, and because Defendant has failed to establish its affirmative defense to copyright infringement, irreparable injury may be presumed in this case. In view of ebay, which applied the traditional four-part test for injunctive relief in the context of a patent claim, there is some question of whether the presumption of irreparable harm still applies. District courts, however, have continued to apply the presumption post- ebay. See, e.g., Warner Bros. Entm't, Inc. v. Carsagno, No. 0 Civ., 00 WL at * (E.D.N.Y. June, 00) (finding irreparable harm where plaintiff had demonstrated that without an injunction, its copyrighted work would be subject to continued copyright infringement); UMG Recordings, Inc. v. Blake, No. 0 Civ. 000, 00 WL, * (E.D.N.C. June, 00) (stating that irreparable injury is presumed when plaintiff succeeds on the merits). LEGAL0/v

Case :0-cv-00-GAF-AJW Document 0 Filed 0/0/00 Page of 0 Warner Bros Entm t v. RDR Books, F.Supp.d at (emphasis added). The Carsagno case, identified by the Court in the Harry Potter case, is a second example of Warner Bros. relying upon and benefiting from the presumption of irreparable injury in another copyright case post-ebay. In that case, Warner Bros sought to enjoin the defendant from distributing (on the Internet and otherwise) Million Dollar Baby, a work in which Warner Bros held copyright interests. After reviewing the decision in ebay and the four-part test identified therein, the Court found no trouble concluding that irreparable injury was presumed: Plaintiff has demonstrated irreparable harm in that without an injunction, its copyrighted film remains subject to continued, repeated infringement. See Video Trip Corp. v. Lightning Video, Inc., F.d 0, - (d Cir.) ( In a copyright action the existence of irreparable injury is presumed upon a showing of a prima facie case of copyright infringement. ); Island Software II, 00 WL, at * ( [W]hen a copyright plaintiff has established liability and a threat of continuing infringement, he is entitled to an injunction. ) Warner Bros. Entm t v. Carsagno, 00 WL at * (emphasis added). When Warner Bros. is protecting its own copyrights interests, the presumption of irreparable injury in copyright cases to restrain infringement of the right to distribute post-ebay is routine and has been applied at least twice to enjoin the release of works in which Warner Bros. has a copyright interest. But in this case, Warner Bros. argues that a -day mini-trial is necessary to determine if Warner Bros. should be enjoined from releasing Watchmen. The presumption of irreparable injury found appropriate in these Warner The opinion goes on to point out that even if not presumed, irreparable injury was established, a holding equally applicable here. Id. at.

Case :0-cv-00-GAF-AJW Document 0 Filed 0/0/00 Page of 0 Bros. cases has also been recently applied in May 00 by a District Court in the th Circuit. In Idearc Media Corp. v. Opinion and Order Northwest Directories, Inc., Civil No. 0--HA, 00 WL (D. Or. May, 00), plaintiff sued to enjoin the defendant from publishing display ads in which the plaintiff held a copyright interest. The Court applied ebay and concluded that, under the four-part test, irreparable injury was presumed: [T]he court is mindful of the Supreme Court's recent admonishment that according to well-established principles of equity, a plaintiff seeking a permanent injunction must satisfy a four-factor test before a court may grant such relief.... Here, the court presumes that there is irreparable harm, because [defendant] is infringing the display ads and using them to compete with [plaintiff] in the Yamhill County directory market. Id. at *. The decision in Idearc only reinforces that even if irreparable injury were not presumed, it is plainly established here because Fox and Warner Bros. are direct competitors. There is no reasonable dispute that release of the Watchmen picture by Warner Bros., after nine months of intense worldwide advertising and promotion by theatrical trailers in movie theatres across the country, the Internet and other media, impacts the parties respective market share for distribution of theatrical pictures. Indeed, Warner Bros. seeks to transfer to Warner Bros. the market share that would otherwise be held by Fox upon distribution of the picture. The cases are settled that a distribution activity that impacts market share is an irreparable injury. Metro- Goldwyn-Mayer Studios, Inc. v. Grokster, F.Supp.d, (C.D. Cal. 00); see also Lubrizol Corp. v. Exxon Corp., F.Supp. 0, (N.D. Ohio ). Where there is irreparable injury, there is no adequate remedy at law. Cadence Design Systems, Inc. v. Avant! Corp., F.d, ( th Cir. ). Nor LEGAL0/v

Case :0-cv-00-GAF-AJW Document 0 Filed 0/0/00 Page of 0 is there any question that the public interest is served, not disserved, by enforcing Fox s copyright interests. For over 0 years, the Copyright Act has never countenanced an infringe now, pay later mentality that permits infringers to avoid injunction by offering to pay the plaintiff damages. See e.g., Triad Systems Corp. v. Southeastern Express Co., F.d 0, ( th Cir. ). Nor can Warner Bros. claim outweighing hardships if the picture is enjoined it is not disputed that Warner Bros. chose to pursue development of the Watchmen picture with full knowledge in May 00 of the Quitclaim, even though Warner Bros. was aware of distribution rights stated in the Quitclaim, and only after deciding not to contact Fox to inquire about the distribution rights. Moreover, the vast majority of costs incurred by Warner Bros. to produce and advertise the Watchmen picture occurred after July 00, when Fox had fully asserted its rights and advised Warner Bros. it proceeded at its own peril to produce and later seek distribution of a Watchmen picture. If the Court concludes that irreparable injury is presumed under the authorities, or that Warner Bros. is estopped to argue otherwise, or that the obvious injury Fox suffers in market share establishes irreparable injury, this may obviate the need for any hearing on January 0 th. At a minimum, Fox believes the Court would benefit from briefing on the controlling standard for the Court to decide the injunction question so that the parties and the Court can determine if there are any remaining disputed facts necessary to adjudicate in order for the Court to decide the injunction issue. It is equally beyond reasonable dispute that Fox suffers irreparable injury in the loss of screens to exhibit Fox pictures in the relevant time period, conflicts posed by the release of Watchmen to the release date for Fox pictures, loss of critical trailer advertising attached to the Watchmen picture and other forms of harm that are not readily, if at all, compensable by money damages. If Warner Bros. seeks to dispute that evidence, they may certainly do so, but to date, no such factual disputes have been identified. Fox proposes that the parties be directed to identify the factual disputes, if any, for which a hearing is necessary on January 0 th.

Case :0-cv-00-GAF-AJW Document 0 Filed 0/0/00 Page of 0 B. The Parties Should Identify the Facts, if Any, Which are in Dispute LEGAL0/v on the Irreparable Injury Issue It is unclear to Fox that there are any factual disputes related to the irreparable injury issue. Warner Bros. to date has identified none. Warner Bros. apparently seeks to call witnesses to testify that Paramount and Warner Bros. will suffer monetary damages if the Court enjoins the movie (damages caused by Paramount and Warner Bros. decision to go forward with the picture in the face of Fox s assertion of rights in July 00). If this is the purpose of these witnesses, Fox would entertain a stipulation that an injunction will result in substantial expenses incurred by these parties that cannot be recovered (at least not through distribution activities) if release of the picture is enjoined. Whether this defeats Fox s showing of irreparable harm is a question for this Court to decide. C. This Court Should Determine What Form of Hearing, if Any, is Necessary to Determine the Irreparable Injury Issue Depending on the Court s determination of the legal standard, and the existence and extent of factual disputes, if any, on irreparable injury, the Court may determine that there is no need or only a limited need for presentation of any evidence, and no need, or any limited need, for the presentation of any live witnesses, and the Court may decide to focus the parties attention on issues the Court considers most important for resolving the injunction issue. Fox submits that the Court should provide that guidance to the parties in advance of the January 0 hearing so that any presentations are directed to the factual or legal issues, if any, for which the Court seeks evidence or argument. V. CONCLUSION Fox proposes an orderly briefing and hearing procedure to resolve the In February 00, within weeks of Fox s filing of this lawsuit, Warner Bros. gave notice to Gordon that Warner Bros. would hold Gordon responsible for all damages Warner Bros. suffers as a result of Fox s claims. Having made a decision to take its chances with Fox on the infringement claim with the understanding that Warner Bros. would later pursue its damages from Gordon, Warner Bros. is in no position to now argue that the expenses incurred to make the picture are a hardship.

Case :0-cv-00-GAF-AJW Document 0 Filed 0/0/00 Page of 0 remaining injunction issue. Warner Bros. has not identified any factual issues reasonably in dispute, and this Court should determine what evidence, if any, is necessary and helpful to the Court to decide whether to enjoin the Watchmen picture under the prevailing legal standard. DATED: January, 00 LOUIS A. KARASIK SAMUEL C. TAYLOR CASONDRA K. RUGA ALSTON & BIRD LLP /s/ Louis A. Karasik Louis A. Karasik Attorneys for Plaintiff TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX FILM CORPORATION

Case :0-cv-00-GAF-AJW Document 0 Filed 0/0/00 Page of 0 CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE I hereby certify that on January, 00, I caused a copy of PLAINTIFF S APPLICATION FOR PERMANENT INJUNCTION AND REQUEST FOR BRIEFING SCHEDULE to be served upon the following counsel in the manner described below: Via the Court s CM/ECF system: Patricia L. Glaser, Esq. Kevin J. Leichter, Esq. Alisa Morgenthaler Lever, Esq. Lisa M. Zepeda, Esq. GLASER, WEIL, FINK, JACOBS & SHAPIRO, LLP Attorneys for Defendants pglaser@glaserweil.com kleichter@glaserweil.com amorgenthaler@glaserweil.com Steven A Marenberg Laura A. Seigle Joshua M. Rodin IRELL & MANELLA LLP smarenberg@irell.com lseigle@irell.com jrodin@irell.com TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX FILM CORPORATION /s/ Louis A. Karasik Attorney for Plaintiff LEGAL0/v