Columbia Pictures Television owned copyrights in numerous television series episodes. John L. Feltner, through his company Filmvideo Releasing Corp., had previously licensed programming from Columbia but continued to broadcast episodes after Columbia terminated the licenses for nonpayment. Columbia sued in the U.S. District Court (within the Ninth Circuit) for copyright infringement and sought statutory damages under 17 U.S.C. § 504(c), alleging willful infringement. Feltner demanded a jury trial on all issues, including the amount of statutory damages. The district court struck the jury demand, reasoning that § 504(c)'s language—"the court may award statutory damages"—lodged the assessment with the judge. After a bench trial, the court found willful infringement of hundreds of works and awarded statutory damages of $20,000 per work, totaling approximately $8.8 million, and issued injunctive relief. The Ninth Circuit affirmed, holding there was no right to a jury trial on statutory damages. The Supreme Court granted certiorari to resolve whether the Seventh Amendment provides a jury-trial right on the amount of statutory damages under the Copyright Act.
Does the Seventh Amendment guarantee a right to a jury trial to determine the amount of statutory damages under 17 U.S.C. § 504(c) in a copyright infringement suit?
The Seventh Amendment preserves the right to a jury trial in "Suits at common law," which includes actions analogous to those tried at law in 18th-century England where legal remedies (such as damages) are sought. Courts apply a two-part test: (1) compare the statutory action to 18th-century actions to determine whether it is more analogous to cases at law or in equity, and (2) examine the remedy sought to determine whether it is legal or equitable, with the remedy inquiry being the more important. When an action is legal and seeks damages, the Seventh Amendment entitles the parties to a jury determination of all factual issues, including the amount of damages. Under 17 U.S.C. § 504(c), all issues pertinent to an award of statutory damages—including the amount within the statutory range and any willfulness determinations affecting that range—must be submitted to a jury upon proper demand.
Yes. The Supreme Court held that the Seventh Amendment guarantees a right to a jury trial to determine the amount of statutory damages under § 504(c) of the Copyright Act. The statute itself does not grant or deny a jury trial right, but the Constitution does.
The Court first considered whether § 504(c) itself confers a statutory right to a jury trial. Although the provision states that "the court may award" statutory damages, the Court found the term "court" ambiguous and not dispositive; it can refer to the judicial tribunal as a whole, which may include a jury. Thus, the statute neither creates nor negates a jury-trial right, and the inquiry turns to the Seventh Amendment. Applying the Seventh Amendment test from Tull v. United States and Granfinanciera, S.A. v. Nordberg, the Court concluded that copyright infringement actions seeking damages are analogous to 18th-century suits at law. Historically, juries decided infringement and assessed damages in copyright cases. The remedy of statutory damages is quintessentially legal: it is a money award designed to compensate or sanction within a prescribed range. The Court emphasized the longstanding common-law practice that juries determine the amount of damages in actions at law, even where statutes set minimums and maximums. Early American copyright statutes, including the Copyright Act of 1790, expressly contemplated jury involvement in assessing damages. The Court distinguished prior cases suggesting that judges might set certain civil penalties (e.g., Tull, which allowed juries to decide liability but left penalty amounts to judges under that statute's scheme) by underscoring that statutory damages in copyright serve a compensatory/punitive function historically entrusted to juries in actions at law. Moreover, allowing juries to determine amounts within statutory bounds is consistent with other contexts—such as punitive damages—where juries exercise guided discretion. Because the action here was legal and sought damages, the Seventh Amendment entitled Feltner to a jury determination of the amount of statutory damages. The Court therefore reversed and remanded. (On remand, a jury assessed statutory damages substantially exceeding the judge's earlier award, illustrating the practical significance of jury assessment.)
Feltner cements the jury's constitutional role in assessing statutory damages in copyright cases and clarifies the methodology for Seventh Amendment analysis in modern statutory schemes. For litigators, it underscores the strategic stakes of jury demands when statutory damages are available—juries may award much more or less than a bench award within broad statutory ranges. For students, the case is a touchstone for understanding: (1) how courts analogize contemporary statutory actions to 18th-century forms; (2) the centrality of the remedy (legal vs. equitable) to Seventh Amendment questions; and (3) the limits of statutory phrasing like "the court may award" in displacing constitutional jury rights. Feltner has also been influential by analogy in other IP statutory damages regimes (e.g., under the Lanham Act's counterfeiting provisions), reinforcing that when legal damages are at issue, juries ordinarily assess the amount.
Feltner v. Columbia Pictures Television reaffirmed the constitutional centrality of juries in actions at law by holding that the Seventh Amendment guarantees a jury trial to determine the amount of statutory damages under the Copyright Act. The Court grounded its analysis in historical practice and the legal character of damages remedies, rejecting arguments that statutory phrasing alone could overcome the jury right.