Monday, December 3, 2012
Disney Demands Rejection of Billion-Dollar Lawsuit Targeting Marvel Characters
Stan Lee Media Inc.'s lawsuit is described as "completely frivolous."
The Walt Disney Co. has asked a judge to dismiss Stan Lee Media Inc.'s billion-dollar lawsuit filed in October over iconic characters including Spider-Man, X-Men and Fantastic Four.
In a motion filed Friday in Colorado federal court, Disney calls the lawsuit "flawed beyond cure" and "completely frivolous," saying that SLMI has attempted to make unsuccessful copyright claims six different times over the years and that the plaintiff should not be allowed to waste the court's time with the latest attempt.
SLMI is the company founded by Stan Lee in 1998 after the comic book legend had a falling out with Marvel. The company was to be a web-based production and marketing company that controlled his intellectual property. SLMI went bankrupt in 2001, and since then, shareholders of the company have argued that the company's assets were raided illegitimately.
In October, SLMI attempted a switch in tactics by targeting Disney for the first time, arguing that Lee didn't properly assign the works to Marvel and that Disney has never recorded its agreement with Marvel with the U.S. Copyright Office. Alleging billions of dollars in damages for the unauthorized use of Lee's legendary creations in films like The Avengers, SLMI hoped to put the burden of proving rightful ownership upon Disney.
Disney says that even if it's true that Lee assigned rights to SLMI on characters such as Iron Man, Thor and X-Men, "Lee nevertheless retained the right to reclaim any intellectual property so conveyed in the event of a material breach, and in fact, by letter dated Jan. 30, 2001, terminated the 1998 Agreement on that basis."
Disney then points to a long line of litigation since the 2001 termination notice and says that the claim of copyright ownership has been rejected it every time has come up.
Disney gives three big reasons why the latest lawsuit should be similarly rejected: res judicata, that the claims are barred because they've already been made and they shouldn't be relitigated; a statute of limitations argument, that SLMI has known about this issue for more than three years before filing a lawsuit; Disney challenges a Colorado federal court's jurisdiction over the matter, saying Disney doesn't have any contacts with Colorado.
Read More: http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/thr-esq/disney-wants-stan-lee-medias-396751
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