98-33607. Copyright Arbitration Royalty Panels; Rules and Regulations  

  • [Federal Register Volume 63, Number 243 (Friday, December 18, 1998)]
    [Proposed Rules]
    [Pages 70080-70086]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 98-33607]
    
    
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    LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
    
    Copyright Office
    
    37 CFR Part 251
    
    [Docket No. 98-3 CARP]
    
    
    Copyright Arbitration Royalty Panels; Rules and Regulations
    
    AGENCY: Copyright Office, Library of Congress.
    
    ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Copyright Office of the Library of Congress is proposing 
    amendments to the regulations governing the conduct of royalty 
    distribution and rate adjustment proceedings prescribed by the 
    Copyright Royalty Tribunal Reform Act of 1993. These changes are 
    designed to fill gaps in the rules that have been the subject of 
    inquiries and to promote the efficient resolution of issues and claims.
    
    DATES: Written comments are due January 19, 1999. Reply comments are 
    due February 16, 1999.
    
    ADDRESSES: If sent BY MAIL, an original and 10 copies of written 
    comments should be addressed to Office of the General Counsel, 
    Copyright Arbitration Royalty Panel (CARP), PO Box 70977, Southwest 
    Station, Washington, DC 20024. If DELIVERED BY HAND, an original and 10 
    copies should be brought to: Office of the General Counsel, Copyright 
    Office, Room LM-403, James Madison Memorial Building, 101 Independence 
    Avenue, SE, Washington, DC 20559-6000.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: David O. Carson, General Counsel, or 
    Tanya Sandros, Attorney-Advisor. Telephone: (202) 707-8380. Telefax: 
    (202) 252-3423.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Copyright Royalty Tribunal Reform Act of 
    1993, Pub. L. 103-198, 17 Stat. 2304, eliminated the Copyright Royalty 
    Tribunal (CRT) and replaced it with a system of ad hoc Copyright 
    Arbitration Royalty Panels (CARPs) administered by the Librarian of 
    Congress (Librarian) and the Copyright Office (Office). The CARPs 
    adjust royalty rates and distribute royalties collected under the 
    various compulsory licenses and statutory obligations of the Copyright 
    Act. In 1994, the Office published final regulations for CARP 
    proceedings. 59 FR 63025 (December 7, 1994). Eighteen months later, the 
    Copyright Office issued a notice making non-substantive, technical 
    changes to the rules. 61 FR 63715 (December 2, 1996). Based on the 
    Office's experience with the rules since they were first enacted, the 
    Office is now proposing substantive changes to these regulations. These 
    changes are designed to fill gaps in the rules that have been the 
    source of inquiry or contention, to promote the early and efficient 
    resolution of issues and claims, and to resolve ambiguities that have 
    fostered misunderstandings. Many of the changes are codifications of 
    rulings the Office has made by order in response to discovery motions. 
    Now the substance of these orders will become part of the rules so that 
    the Office's policies are known in advance, and the motions upon which 
    they were based become unnecessary.
        The Office has also received two petitions requesting additional 
    changes to the CARP regulations 1 from parties who have 
    participated in previous CARP proceedings. On July 29, 1998, Program 
    Suppliers 2 filed a request for rulemaking to amend 
    Sec. 251.5 (Program Suppliers' Request). The purpose of the requested 
    rulemaking is ``to eliminate the requirement that copyright arbitration 
    royalty panels (``CARPs'') consist entirely of lawyers prior to 
    assigning a CARP for the satellite carrier royalty distribution 
    hearing.'' Program Suppliers' Request at 1. In addition, Mr. James 
    Cannings 3 has a petition for a rulemaking pending before 
    the Office. He seeks an amendment to Sec. 251.44(f) (Cannings' 
    Petition) which would require parties who join together and submit a 
    single direct case to designate a lead counsel for purposes of future 
    service.
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        \1\ Copies of these documents are on file in the Copyright 
    General Counsel's Office, Room LM-403, James Madison Building, 
    Washington, DC.
        \2\ Program Suppliers are a group of producers and distributors 
    of syndicated programming. Historically, they participate in CARP 
    proceedings that set rates for the cable and satellite compulsory 
    licenses and in those proceedings that determine the distribution of 
    cable and satellite royalties among the copyright owners who file an 
    annual claim.
        \3\ Mr. Cannings is a songwriter and publisher who participates 
    in CARP proceedings which determine the distribution of cable 
    royalties and in those proceedings to determine the distribution of 
    the royalties collected annually pursuant to chapter 10 of the 
    Copyright Act, 17 United States Code.
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        The Copyright Office has incorporated the concerns of these 
    petitioners into this proposed rulemaking proceeding. Specifics on 
    these proposals are discussed herein. However, the Office is denying 
    Program Suppliers' request that the Office not select a panel for the 
    scheduled 1992-1995 satellite distribution proceeding before it 
    completes consideration of the Program Suppliers' proposed amendment. 
    The Office has already compiled and published the list of arbitrators 
    for 1998 and 1999 pursuant to Sec. 251.3, and it has scheduled the 
    satellite distribution proceeding to begin on January 8, 1999. Under 
    the current time constraints, it would be impossible to consider the 
    proposed changes, finalize the amendments, and generate a new list, 
    assuming that the Office agreed to adopt Program Suppliers' suggestion 
    for amending Sec. 251.5. Furthermore, the Office is considering 
    numerous changes to its regulations and has decided to conduct a single 
    rulemaking proceeding to consider all substantive changes to
    
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    the regulations governing the CARPs. For these reasons, the Office 
    denies Program Suppliers' request to conclude its consideration of the 
    proposed amendment before selecting the satellite distribution 
    arbitration panel.
        Interested parties may file comments on the issues outlined below, 
    the proposed changes raised in both proposals, and on any other areas 
    of concern.
    
    I. Qualifications of the Arbitrators
    
        Section 251.5 requires that each person serving on a CARP be an 
    attorney with at least 10 or more years of legal practice. Program 
    Suppliers assert that the recent decision by the District of Columbia 
    Circuit upholding the Librarian's final determination as to the 
    distribution of the 1990-1992 cable royalties compels a reevaluation of 
    the all-attorney requirement. See National Ass'n of Broadcasters v. 
    Librarian of Congress, 146 F.3d 907 (D.C. Cir. 1998). In that decision, 
    the Court noted that the CARP system ``replace[d] the Tribunal's quasi-
    adjudication with an arbitration undertaken by an ad hoc panel whose 
    proposed settlement is then reviewed by final decisionmakers * * *.'' 
    Id. at 920 (citing H.R. Rep. No. 103-286, at 11 (1993)). Program 
    Suppliers argue that because the CARP system seems to move away from 
    the classic adjudicatory model, ``individuals from disciplines other 
    than law should be permitted to serve as arbitrators, [thereby 
    bringing] to the process a perspective and expertise that the all-
    attorney requirement excludes.'' Program Suppliers' Request at 4. In 
    essence, Program Suppliers believe that the all-attorney panel's lack 
    of any experience with the technical, economic, and industry concepts 
    central to these proceedings have impeded the process, or at the very 
    least, ``did nothing to enhance the efficiency or the quality of the 
    hearing or decisionmaking processes.'' Id. at 5.
        The current provision was considered when the Copyright Office 
    promulgated the CARP regulations now in effect. At that time, the 
    Office determined that arbitrators should be attorneys because of the 
    judicial nature of the proceedings. See Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 
    59 FR 2550 (January 18, 1994); Interim Regulations, 59 FR 23964 (May 9, 
    1994); Final Rules, 59 FR 63025 (December 7, 1994). Nevertheless, the 
    Office invites comments on these provisions once again, in light of the 
    recent decision from the District of Columbia Circuit and the parties' 
    experience with the all-attorney panels in the five concluded 
    proceedings.
    
    II. Public Records
    
        Unlike the recommendation of the Register of Copyrights and the 
    final order of the Librarian of Congress, which are published in the 
    Federal Register in accordance with 17 U.S.C. 802(f), the official 
    report of the CARP is not. The Office has chosen instead to make it 
    available to the public for inspection and copying through the Office 
    of the Copyright General Counsel. The Office decided against 
    publication of the panel's report in the Federal Register for two 
    reasons: (1) It is fully discussed in the Register's published 
    recommendation, and (2) it is not a final determination. The Office has 
    also begun to post the CARPs' reports on its website. See http://
    www.loc.gov/copyright/carp.
    
    III. Formal Hearings
    
        Section 251.41(b) permits a CARP to decide a controversy or rate 
    adjustment on the basis of written pleadings, without an oral hearing, 
    in certain circumstances. A petition to dispense with formal hearings 
    may be granted by the Librarian during the 45-day precontroversy period 
    if (1) there is no genuine issue of material fact to be decided or (2) 
    all parties agree to the petition. The Office is considering whether to 
    expand this provision to add other circumstances upon which the 
    Librarian may grant a petition to dispense with formal hearings.
        As Sec. 251.41(b) currently is written, the provision for a CARP 
    determination based on a written record is consistent with copyright 
    law and the Administrative Procedure Act (APA). The Copyright Act 
    states that a CARP ``shall act on the basis of a fully documented 
    written record'' and any copyright owner or other person participating 
    in arbitration proceedings ``may submit relevant information and 
    proposals'' to the arbitration panels. 17 U.S.C. 802(c). CARP 
    proceedings are also subject to the requirements of the Administrative 
    Procedure Act, subchapter II of chapter 5 of title V of the United 
    States Code. 17 U.S.C. 802(c). The APA states that an agency may 
    ``adopt procedures for the submission of all or part of the evidence in 
    written form'' so long as ``a party will not be prejudiced thereby.'' 5 
    U.S.C. 556(d). Principles of due process provide guidance as to what 
    would prejudice a party.
        In Gray Panthers v. Schweiker, 652 F.2d 146, 164 (D.C. Cir. 1980), 
    the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit 
    discussed four factors to be weighed in determining the ``dictates of 
    due process'' in any assessment of whether procedural requirements 
    afford the parties adequate protection. The factors include: the 
    private interest affected, the risk of an erroneous deprivation of such 
    interest, the probable value of additional or substitute procedural 
    safeguards, and the fiscal and administrative burdens that the 
    additional or substitute procedural requirements would entail.
        There are a number of factors that weigh in favor of expanding 
    Sec. 251.41(b). The nature of CARP proceedings and the type of issues 
    involved heavily depend on documentary evidence. Consequently, there is 
    often no need for the fact finder to observe the demeanor of witnesses 
    to weigh the value of their testimony. All parties have full access to 
    the written record that is the basis for the decision. Discovery 
    procedures offer any party the opportunity to test the other parties' 
    factual assertions by requiring the production of underlying facts, and 
    therefore diminish the need for cross-examination. On the other hand, 
    one argument in support of oral hearings is that certain parties are 
    less sophisticated or less capable of representing themselves and an 
    oral hearing can overcome these problems.
        The Office believes, however, that most of the factors established 
    in Gray Panthers favor expanding the circumstances in which a CARP may 
    base its determination on a written record without conducting oral 
    hearings in order to promote the public interest by reducing costs and 
    promoting administrative efficiencies. The Office would like to receive 
    comments from interested parties about whether there are additional 
    circumstances upon which the Librarian could base his determination to 
    allow the CARP to proceed solely on the basis of the written pleadings, 
    without violating due process requirements.
        In addition, the Office also welcomes comments on the procedures 
    for waiving oral hearings. For example, should the Librarian continue 
    to rule on petitions to waive oral hearings or should the CARP make 
    such determinations?
    
    IV. Written Cases
    
    A. Incorporation of Past Testimony
    
        Section 251.43(c) states:
    
        Each party may designate a portion of past records, including 
    records of the Copyright Royalty Tribunal, that it wants included in 
    its direct case. Complete testimony of each witness whose testimony 
    is designated (i.e., direct, cross and redirect) must be referenced.
    
        There seems to be some misunderstanding regarding this provision, 
    since objections were filed
    
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    when opposing parties incorporated prior testimony into their written 
    direct case by reprinting it. The term ``designate,'' however, is not 
    limited to identifying where the documents may be found. It is also 
    permissible for a party to include the entire text of prior testimony 
    in the direct case. Therefore, the Office proposes to amend 
    Sec. 251.43(c) to clarify this interpretation.
        The amended regulation also removes any use of the more general 
    term ``record,'' in favor of the more specific term, ``testimony,'' to 
    avoid any confusion about the nature of the past records that a party 
    may include in his or her direct case.
        The Office invites comments on whether and why it should be 
    permissible to designate past ``records'' and why records other than 
    past testimony should be included in a party's direct case. In 
    addition, the Office is proposing a conforming amendment to 
    Sec. 251.43(e).
    
    B. Declaration of Stated Claims or Requested Rates and Terms
    
        The Office proposes amending Sec. 251.43(d) in two respects. First, 
    the Office proposes requiring the addition of proposed terms to the 
    direct case. With the passage of the Digital Performance Right in Sound 
    Recordings Act, there are now a number of proceedings where the CARP is 
    supposed to determine the terms, as well as the rates. Therefore, when 
    a party files a written direct case in a rate setting proceeding, the 
    Office proposes to add a requirement that the party must state its 
    requested terms, if that is an issue in the proceeding, as well as its 
    requested rate.
        Second, the Office proposes clarifying the point at which 
    settlement is reached. The Office has a strong policy in favor of 
    private settlements, which it wishes to encourage at every step of the 
    process. Therefore, the Office invites comment on two alternative 
    proposals for reaching settlement during the final phase of the process 
    prior to the empaneling of a CARP.
        Under the first proposal (which is the approach adopted in these 
    proposed amendments), a party states in its written direct case a 
    percentage or dollar claim, or proposes a rate, which may be accepted 
    by all the other parties to the proceeding within seven days of filing 
    the direct case. If the other parties accept the stated claim or rate, 
    they can so notify the Librarian. Such an acceptance may then become 
    the basis upon which the Librarian may make the official distribution 
    or rate adjustment without it being necessary to send the case to the 
    CARP. This official distribution or rate adjustment can be made with or 
    without precedential effect, according to the wishes of the parties. 
    See proposed Sec. 251.43(d). Once the Librarian is so notified, the 
    party whose requested claim or rate has been accepted by all other 
    parties will not be able to revise its claim or rate, and thus thwart a 
    resolution of the dispute. However, until and unless the other parties 
    accept the requested claim or rate during the specified ten day period, 
    no party will be precluded from revising its claim or its requested 
    rate at any time during the proceeding up to the filing of the proposed 
    findings of facts and conclusions of law. The Office proposes to retain 
    the parties' option to revise their claims or rates, in the absence of 
    the other parties' agreement, to encourage realistic assessment of 
    their cases in light of evidence that is developed during the 
    proceeding.
        Another approach to settlement after the filing of the written 
    direct case would be to allow the Librarian to adopt a proposed claim 
    or rate in those instances where no party files an objection to another 
    party's proffered claim or rate. As in the preceding proposal, the 
    party making the percentage or dollar claim, or proposed rate, would be 
    unable to adjust the proffered claim or rate during the specified ten 
    day period. Of course, it may occur in a particular proceeding that the 
    sum of the parties' claims to royalties would exceed 100% of the 
    royalty pool, in which case the Librarian would be unable to adopt any 
    parties' proposed percentage or dollar claim to the fund in those 
    instances where no objections were filed. Similarly, the Librarian 
    would be unable to choose among several proposed rates offered for a 
    similar purpose in any proceeding where more than one of the rates 
    remained unchallenged.
        In spite of these potential problems, the Office considers it 
    worthwhile to explore these options to settlement. Therefore, the 
    Office seeks comment from all interested parties on the two proposals 
    for late stage settlement; or alternatively, parties may offer their 
    own proposals for further consideration. The object of any proposal, 
    however, is to encourage fair and equitable settlements among the 
    parties while increasing the efficiencies of the administrative 
    process.
    
    V. Filing and Service of Written Cases and Pleadings
    
    A. Subscription and Verification
    
        The Office proposes an amendment to Sec. 251.44(e)(2), which deals 
    with pro se parties, to conform it to Sec. 251.44(e)(1), which contains 
    parallel requirements for parties represented by attorneys. At the end 
    of Sec. 251.44(e)(2), the proposed amendment adds the requirement that 
    the signature of a pro se party on a document filed in a case 
    ``constitutes certification that to the best of his or her knowledge 
    and belief there is good ground to support the document, and that it 
    has not been interposed for purposes of delay.'' This is a standard 
    requirement for signatures on legal documents and should apply with 
    equal force to all participants in a proceeding.
    
    B. Service
    
        Section 251.44(f) requires a party to serve a copy of all filings 
    ``upon counsel of all other parties identified in the service list, or, 
    if the party is unrepresented by counsel, upon the party itself.'' Mr. 
    Cannings proposes that in those cases where parties join together and 
    file a single direct case, service should be made to a single lead 
    counsel to be designated by the parties to the joint case, who in turn, 
    would be responsible for distributing the pleadings further. In support 
    of his request for the amendment, Mr. Cannings argues that the current 
    requirement places an undue burden on an individual party, creating an 
    inequitable and unfair financial hardship on an individual participant. 
    The Office seeks comment on the Cannings proposal.
    
    VI. Discovery and Prehearing Motions
    
        Section 251.45 is an important provision of the CARP rules. The 
    section sets the requirements for eligibility to participate in a CARP 
    proceeding, establishes the terms of both precontroversy discovery and 
    discovery during a proceeding, and delineates certain pleading 
    requirements. Section 251.45 is the mainstay for procedural and 
    evidentiary rulings that the Librarian has made in accordance with his 
    authority under 17 U.S.C. 801(c). As such, the section has become the 
    subject of much interpretation by the Librarian, and certain precedents 
    have developed during the course of its application. The Office 
    believes that these precedents need to be reflected in the rules, in 
    addition to the other practice points raised for consideration, in 
    order to maximize the effectiveness of the section.
    
    A. Notices of Intent To Participate
    
        Paragraph (a) of Sec. 251.45 provides that parties wishing to 
    participate in royalty distribution and rate adjustment proceedings 
    must file a notice of intent to participate, as directed by the
    
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    Librarian. In cable and satellite royalty distribution proceedings, 
    there are two phases to the distribution. The first phase involves 
    dividing the collected royalties among the various claimant categories 
    involved in the proceeding (music, sports, etc.). The second phase 
    resolves disputes concerning the further distribution of royalties 
    within a category that arise between individual claimants. The Office 
    is proposing to amend paragraph (a) to require that parties filing a 
    notice of intent to participate in royalty distributions identify in a 
    single notice each phase of the proceeding in which they intend to 
    participate. Specific inclusion of this provision in the regulation 
    will ensure efficient administration of the process and give all 
    parties a full, fair opportunity to participate.
    
    B. Service of Pleadings During Precontroversy Discovery
    
        Section 251.45 (b)(1)(i) and (b)(2)(i) provide that all motions, 
    petitions, objections, oppositions, and replies filed during the 
    precontroversy discovery period must be served by means no slower than 
    overnight express mail. The Office seeks comment as to whether the 
    requirement that pleadings be served by overnight express mail is 
    unduly costly and, if so, given the limited precontroversy discovery 
    period, how might service be otherwise permitted.
    
    C. Discovery Practice by the CARP
    
        Under current practice, the Librarian of Congress oversees 
    discovery on the written direct cases, and the CARP oversees discovery 
    on the rebuttal cases, although the Librarian has the discretion to 
    designate discovery matters to the CARP for its resolution. Section 
    251.45(c)(1) of the rules, however, currently states that the CARP 
    shall designate a period of discovery on both the written direct cases 
    and the rebuttal cases, which suggests that there are two rounds of 
    discovery on the written cases: one conducted by the Librarian and the 
    other by the CARP. Therefore, the Office is deleting the reference to 
    the written direct cases to make clear that the CARP oversees only 
    discovery on the rebuttal cases and not on the written direct cases, 
    unless otherwise directed by the Librarian.
    
    D. Objections to Written Direct Cases
    
        Currently, Sec. 251.45(c)(2) provides that ``[a]fter the filing of 
    the written cases with a CARP, any party may file with a CARP 
    objections to any portion of another party's written case on any proper 
    ground including, without limitation, relevance, competency, and 
    failure to provide underlying documents.'' The Office is proposing to 
    clarify this sentence so that parties make evidentiary objections to 
    the CARP during the course of the proceeding and not to the Librarian 
    during the precontroversy discovery period.
    
    E. Precontroversy Discovery
    
        Section 251.45(b) and (c) currently govern the establishment of a 
    precontroversy discovery period, motions practice, and the limitations 
    on discovery. The Librarian has extensively applied these provisions in 
    each of the CARP proceedings he has conducted, and certain shortcomings 
    of these rules have been identified. The greatest difficulties have 
    surrounded the rather terse description in paragraph (c) of what types 
    and categories of documents are subject to discovery in CARP 
    proceedings. The Librarian has been called upon to resolve numerous 
    discovery disputes and has fashioned certain principles to better 
    articulate the boundaries of discovery. The Office believes that these 
    principles should be included in the rules.
        Consequently, the Office is recommending creation of a new 
    paragraph (d), entitled ``Limitations on discovery,'' and redesignation 
    of the current paragraph (d) as paragraph (f). The provisions of this 
    new paragraph are intended to apply to both precontroversy discovery 
    and any discovery that is directed by the CARPs.
    1. Underlying Documents
        Proposed Sec. 251.45(d)(1) provides that parties ``may request of 
    an opposing party nonprivileged underlying documents related to the 
    written exhibits and testimony.'' This is the current standard for 
    discovery enunciated in current paragraph (c), and remains the standard 
    governing discovery under the proposed changes. New paragraphs (1), 
    (2), and (3) expand on the basic standard. Paragraph (1) provides that 
    underlying documents include only those documents that underlie a 
    witness' factual assertions and do not include documents which are 
    intended to augment the record with what the witness might have said or 
    put forward, or explore the boundaries of what the witness said. They 
    are also not documents which underlie a witness' opinion testimony, 
    since that testimony is not, by definition, a factual assertion.
        Documents that underlie a witness' factual assertions are those 
    documents that the witness relied upon in making his or her assertion. 
    Documents ``relied upon'' by a witness is a somewhat elusive concept, 
    because these are not necessarily just the documents that a witness 
    looked at and considered in making his or her factual assertion. For 
    example, a witness may make a statement based upon a summary fact sheet 
    of a statistical survey. The facts asserted by the witness actually 
    come from the statistical survey, even though the witness never 
    actually examined, or perhaps even had access to the survey. In 
    circumstances where the asserted facts are the essential part of the 
    witness' testimony, or are the crux of a claimant's case, production of 
    the statistical survey is appropriate. At the same time, however, the 
    Library must balance the costs associated with production of the survey 
    against the evidentiary benefits derived from the production. The 
    Librarian must make these determinations on a case by case basis, and 
    it would be inappropriate, if not impossible, to attempt to resolve 
    these cases by codified rules. The Office, therefore, believes that a 
    requirement for production of documents relied upon by a witness in 
    making his or her factual assertions is a sufficient principle to 
    announce in the rules, with specific applications of the principle left 
    to the determination of the Librarian or the CARP as the circumstances 
    warrant.
        Paragraph (1) also provides that a party seeking discovery must 
    identify, in its discovery requests, the specific factual assertion of 
    a witness for which documents are sought. This includes identifying the 
    witness by name, the page number on which the assertions appear, and 
    the assertions themselves.
    2. Supporting Documents for Bottom-Line Figures
        Proposed Sec. 251.45(d)(2) involves the principle of verification 
    of bottom-line numbers. Both royalty distribution and rate adjustment 
    proceedings are number-intensive, and many witnesses testify as to 
    what, for example, a royalty rate should be, or why the royalty rate 
    submitted by another party is the incorrect amount. Witnesses 
    submitting this type of testimony must be prepared to exchange the 
    documents that assisted them in offering their figures. Like underlying 
    facts described in paragraph (1), however, a balance must be struck 
    between the quality of the testimony produced by obtaining the 
    supporting documents and the cost of producing the documents. It is not 
    the goal of the CARP discovery process always to trace a bottom-line 
    figure to its origins, for such a practice will often drive the cost of 
    discovery well beyond the benefits of obtaining the documentation. The 
    Librarian must balance the relevance of the testimony with the cost of 
    obtaining supporting documentation and make individual determinations. 
    The purpose
    
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    of paragraph (2) is, therefore, to state the principle rather than its 
    application to particular circumstances.
        Another sometimes elusive matter is what constitutes a ``bottom-
    line figure.'' Many numbers may be offered as means of arriving at a 
    specific distribution percentage or royalty rate, some of which can be 
    considered bottom-line figures and others which are explanatory or 
    elucidative. Again, the rule states the principle, not the application.
    3. Confidential Material
        Proposed Sec. 251.45(d)(3) provides that where discovery may result 
    in production of confidential materials, the parties may negotiate in 
    good faith the terms of a protective order, subject to the approval of 
    the Librarian. The parties are free and encouraged to negotiate a 
    protective order on their own for submission to and approval by the 
    Librarian.
    4. Penalty for Lack of Responsive Discovery
        To facilitate the precontroversy discovery schedule, proposed 
    Sec. 251.45(d)(4) states that all parties must be prepared to cooperate 
    in the exchange of discovery material. A party may not withhold 
    identified documents which it has said that it will produce simply 
    because it is displeased with the response to its discovery requests by 
    other parties. Document production is to take place on time, as 
    directed in the discovery schedule. A party aggrieved by another's 
    response or failure to respond to its discovery request currently has 
    only the remedy of submitting a motion to compel production with the 
    Librarian. Under the proposed rule, failure to comply with the 
    production dates without a showing of good cause would result in the 
    striking of the testimony which the documents underlie upon the motion 
    of another party.
    5. Organized Discovery Response
        All parties must furnish the opposing sides with the underlying 
    documents in as organized and usable a form as possible, whether in 
    hard copy or digital format. Therefore, Sec. 251.45(d)(5) requires the 
    party producing documents to label each document corresponding to the 
    request for which it is responsive. Production of undifferentiated 
    documents, or the practice of ``dumping'' documents, is not acceptable.
    
    F. Precedential Rulings
    
        Section 802(c) of the Copyright Act, 17 U.S.C., states that ``[t]he 
    arbitration panels shall act on the basis of a fully documented written 
    record, prior decisions of the Copyright Royalty Tribunal, prior 
    copyright arbitration royalty panel determinations, and rulings by the 
    Librarian of Congress under section 801(c).'' The procedural rules of 
    part 251 of 37 CFR are rules of general applicability to CARP 
    proceedings, and interpretations of those rules made in the context of 
    such proceedings apply with equal force to all subsequent CARP 
    proceedings. This means that the Librarian's precontroversy discovery 
    rulings serve as precedents for subsequent CARP proceedings as well. To 
    make this clear, the Office proposes to add a new paragraph (e), 
    entitled ``Precedential rulings.''
    
    VII. Written Orders
    
        The Copyright Office proposes amending Sec. 251.50 to require that 
    a CARP's substantive rulings be issued in written form along with a 
    brief statement explaining the CARP's rationale. Currently, Sec. 251.50 
    states that the CARP may issue rulings or orders that are necessary to 
    resolve issues in the proceedings. This authority is based on the 
    requirements contained in the Administrative Procedure Act at 5 U.S.C., 
    subchapter II.
        Currently, the only record of oral decisions is in the transcripts 
    of the proceedings and one has to review the hearing transcript to find 
    any reference to them. The proposed amendment has several benefits. It 
    will provide a more structured approach to the decision making process 
    and preserve orders in a more accessible form.
        Section 555(e) of the Administrative Procedure Act already requires 
    that denials of written applications, petitions or other requests be 
    accompanied by a brief statement of the grounds for denial. The 
    Copyright Office requests comments about this proposed change, in 
    particular whether it should be limited to denials or whether it should 
    apply to other types of orders.
    
    VIII. Review of the CARP Report
    
        The CARP must conclude its work and submit its determination within 
    180 days from publication of the notice of commencement of a CARP 
    proceeding in the Federal Register. The statute also requires that 
    ``[s]uch report shall be accompanied by the written record, and shall 
    set forth the facts that the arbitration panel found relevant to its 
    determination.'' 17 U.S.C. 802(e). The Register of Copyrights then 
    reviews the CARP's report and makes a recommendation to the Librarian 
    of Congress whether to accept or reject it. If the Librarian rejects 
    the Panel's determination, he or she issues an order setting the rate 
    or distribution of royalty fees. Id.
        Currently, Sec. 251.55 allows any party to file with the Librarian 
    of Congress a petition to modify or set aside the determination of the 
    CARP during the first 14 days of the Librarian's review. 37 CFR 
    251.55(a). The regulations also allow an additional 14 days for replies 
    to such petitions. 37 CFR 251.55(b). The petitions have proven 
    extremely useful to the Librarian and the Register of Copyrights in 
    their review of the CARP's report. The CARP itself, however, has no 
    opportunity to review the petitions and replies to consider the 
    arguments made therein. The Copyright Office believes that there have 
    been occasions in past CARP proceedings when a Panel might well have 
    modified its own decision if it had had the opportunity to consider the 
    petitions that were filed with the Librarian. Thus, it might well 
    increase the efficiency of the review process and the quality of the 
    decisionmaking to give the CARP itself an opportunity to do so. 
    Therefore, the Office seeks comment from interested parties on whether 
    the CARP should have an opportunity to consider the petitions and to 
    revise its report before the Register and the Librarian engage in their 
    review.
        Alternatively, the Office seeks comment on the possibility of 
    remanding a determination of a CARP for further consideration in light 
    of a determination by the Librarian that the report is arbitrary or 
    contrary to law, or in those instances where the Librarian cannot 
    determine whether there exist sufficient facts to support a conclusion 
    that the Panel did not act arbitrarily. Cases might also occur where 
    the record might indicate that the Panel acted arbitrarily, but there 
    are insufficient facts on the record to allow the Librarian to 
    substitute his or her own determination.
        At this time, the Copyright Office is not proposing specific 
    regulations which would require the parties to submit the petitions to 
    modify directly to the CARP or provide for the possibility of a remand 
    to the Panel under the circumstances outlined above. Instead, the 
    Office invites comment from the interested parties on the advantages 
    and disadvantages of instituting changes to the CARP system along the 
    lines proposed herein.
    
    IX. Other Suggestions Welcome
    
        The Copyright Office welcomes any additional comments and 
    suggestions from interested parties on other
    
    [[Page 70085]]
    
    substantive or procedural matters not covered by these proposed 
    changes.
    
    List of Subjects in 37 CFR Part 251
    
        Administrative practice and procedure, Hearing and appeal 
    procedures.
    
    Proposed Rules
    
        For the reasons set out in the Preamble, Chapter II of Title 37 of 
    the Code of Federal Regulations is proposed to be amended as follows:
    
    PART 251--COPYRIGHT ARBITRATION ROYALTY PANEL RULES OF PROCEDURES
    
        1. The authority citation for part 251 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 17 U.S.C. 801-803.
    
        2. Section 251.21 is amended by revising paragraph (a) to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 251.21  Public records.
    
        (a) All official reports of a Copyright Arbitration Royalty Panel 
    are available for inspection and copying at the address provided in 
    Sec. 251.1.
    * * * * *
        3. Section 251.43 is amended by revising paragraphs (c), (d) and 
    (e) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 251.43  Written cases.
    
    * * * * *
        (c) Each party may include in its direct case designated portions 
    of past testimony from prior Copyright Arbitration Royalty Panel or the 
    Copyright Royalty Tribunal proceedings, including any exhibits 
    associated with the designated testimony. Such designation may be done 
    by reference to the appropriate proceeding or by including the text of 
    the past testimony in the direct case. Complete testimony of each 
    witness whose testimony is designated (i.e., direct, cross and 
    redirect) must be referenced.
        (d) In the case of a royalty fee distribution proceeding, each 
    party must state in the written direct case its percentage or dollar 
    claim to the fund. In the case of a rate adjustment proceeding, each 
    party must state its requested rate and, if applicable, terms. If, 
    within ten days of the filing of the direct case, all the other parties 
    to the proceeding accept the proffered claim or rate and terms as the 
    basis for a distribution or rate adjustment, they may so notify the 
    Librarian. The Librarian may make the distribution or rate adjustment 
    on that basis. The distribution or rate adjustment will have no 
    precedential effect on future proceedings, unless all the parties to 
    the proceeding request otherwise. Until and unless all the other 
    parties to the proceeding accept the proffered claim or rate, no party 
    will be precluded from revising its claim or its requested rate at any 
    time during the proceeding up to the filing of the proposed findings of 
    fact and conclusions of law.
        (e) No evidence, including exhibits, may be submitted in the 
    written direct case without a sponsoring witness, except where the CARP 
    has taken official notice, or in the case of incorporation by reference 
    of past testimony, or for good cause shown.
    * * * * *
        4. Section 251.44 is amended by adding a sentence at the end of 
    paragraph (e)(2) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 251.44  Filing and service of written cases and pleadings.
    
    * * * * *
        (e) Subscription and verification. (1) * * *
        (2) * * * A party's signature constitutes certification that to the 
    best of his or her knowledge and belief there is good ground to support 
    the document, and that it has not been interposed for purposes of 
    delay.
    * * * * *
        5. Section 251.45 is amended by adding a sentence at the end of 
    paragraph (a), revising paragraph (c), redesignating current paragraph 
    (d) as paragraph (f), and adding new paragraphs (d) and (e) to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 251.45  Discovery and prehearing motions.
    
        (a) * * * All parties who file a notice of intention to participate 
    shall identify any and all controversies in which they have an interest 
    and intend to pursue that interest.
        (b) * * *
        (c) Discovery and motions filed with a Copyright Arbitration 
    Royalty Panel. (1) A Copyright Arbitration Royalty Panel shall 
    designate a period following the filing of rebuttal cases in which 
    parties may request of an opposing party nonprivileged underlying 
    documents related to the written exhibits and testimony.
        (2) After the initiation of a CARP proceeding, any party may file 
    with a CARP objections to any portion of another party's written case 
    on any proper ground including, without limitation, relevance, 
    competency, and failure to provide underlying documents. If an 
    objection is apparent from the face of a written case, that objection 
    must be raised with the CARP before the closing of the record, or the 
    party may thereafter be precluded from raising such an objection.
        (d) Limitations on discovery. The following requirements apply to 
    all proceedings conducted pursuant to this section:
        (1) Parties may request of an opposing party nonprivileged 
    documents that underlie a witness' factual assertions. In order to 
    discover the documents that underlie a witness' factual assertions, the 
    requesting party must identify the witness by name and specify the 
    factual assertions of that witness for which supporting documents are 
    sought. Documents that underlie a witness' factual assertions are those 
    documents that the witness relied upon to make his or her assertion.
        (2) Parties who offer total numeric or financial figures in a CARP 
    proceeding without supporting documentation must be prepared to share 
    underlying data that contributed to those totals so that the figures 
    may be verified, notwithstanding any assertions of confidentiality.
        (3) The parties may negotiate, under good faith, protective orders, 
    subject to approval by the Librarian, so that the underlying data can 
    be revealed and confidentiality can be protected.
        (4) All parties to a proceeding must continue to comply with the 
    discovery schedule for the exchange of any noncontroversial evidence, 
    even when motions relating to discovery have been filed with the 
    Librarian or the Copyright Arbitration Royalty Panel and are pending 
    decision. Failure to show good cause as to why responsive documents 
    were not produced by the deadlines established in a precontroversy 
    discovery schedule shall result in the striking of testimony that the 
    dilatory documents support.
        (5) All documents offered in response must be furnished in as 
    organized and usable a form as possible. Produced documents must be 
    labeled to correspond with the categories in the request.
        (e) Precedential rulings. The procedural rules of Subchapter B of 
    37 CFR are rules of general applicability to CARP proceedings. 
    Interpretations of those rules by the Librarian of Congress or the CARP 
    that are made in the context of such proceedings apply with equal force 
    to all subsequent proceedings.
        (f) * * *
    * * * * *
    
    
    Sec. 251.50  Rulings and orders.
    
        6. Section 251.50 is amended by removing the words ``contained in 
    this subchapter'' and in their place, adding the words ``of the 
    Copyright Office'', and by adding a new sentence to the end of the 
    paragraph to read, ``Any such
    
    [[Page 70086]]
    
    rulings or orders must be issued in writing, accompanied by a brief 
    statement in support of the ruling.''
    * * * * *
    
        Dated: November 23, 1998.
    Marybeth Peters,
    Register of Copyrights.
        Approved by:
    James H. Billington,
    The Librarian of Congress.
    [FR Doc. 98-33607 Filed 12-17-98; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 1410-33-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
12/18/1998
Department:
U.S. Copyright Office, Library of Congress
Entry Type:
Proposed Rule
Action:
Notice of proposed rulemaking.
Document Number:
98-33607
Dates:
Written comments are due January 19, 1999. Reply comments are due February 16, 1999.
Pages:
70080-70086 (7 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Docket No. 98-3 CARP
PDF File:
98-33607.pdf
CFR: (11)
37 CFR 251.41(b)
37 CFR 251.43(c)
37 CFR 251.45(d)(4)
37 CFR 251.43(e)
37 CFR 251.1
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