• When you click on links to various merchants on this site and make a purchase, this can result in this site earning a commission. Affiliate programs and affiliations include, but are not limited to, the eBay Partner Network.

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

Jerry Siegel loses SuperMan copyright appeal

48 posts in this topic

Excellent. Pre-ordered for kindle, looking forward to it.

 

Great stuff here -- I like Mark's idea of the lawsuit being in "two chapters."

 

Jerry and Joe did make a lot of money initially, but it was gone by the late forties. Hey, you can read all about it in my book! Comes out in June:

-Brad

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Latest development in the Superman litigation. Not a significant, nor really unexpected, decision. It is very difficult to obtain sanctions against an attorney, but the continuing factual development does not paint a positive picture of how the Siegel family and their lawyer, in particular, have handled this case.

 

http://www.law.com/jsp/nlj/PubArticleNLJ.jsp?id=1202591754553&et=editorial&bu=National%20Law%20Journal&cn=20130312nlj&src=EMC-Email&pt=NLJ.com-%20Daily%20Headlines&kw=Judge%20rejects%20sanctions%20in%20fight%20for%20ownership%20of%20%27Superman%27&slreturn=20130212124413

 

 

 

Judge rejects sanctions in fight for ownership of 'Superman'

 

Amanda Bronstad

 

The National Law Journal

 

03-11-2013

 

 

A federal judge, although "deeply troubled" by his behavior, has refused to sanction prominent entertainment attorney Marc Toberoff for alleged discovery violations during his lengthy court battle over the rights to Superman.

 

Toberoff, of Toberoff & Associates in Malibu, Calif., represents the heirs to one of the co-creators of Superman. They have sued DC Comics, a subsidiary of Time Warner Inc.'s Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc., to terminate the studio's rights to the comic book hero's copyright.

 

DC Comics later sued the heirs and Toberoff, alleging that he illegally sought to repudiate a 2001 agreement with the studio so that he could become a business partner with his clients in a new deal over the Superman rights. As part of the later suit, DC Comics' attorney Daniel Petrocelli, a partner at Los Angeles-based O'Melveny & Myers, sought terminating sanctions against Toberoff after he failed to reveal several letters in his privilege logs. Petrocelli also sought an evidentiary hearing and, if needed, a special master.

 

In a March 8 order, U.S. District Judge Otis Wright in Los Angeles refused to go along, concluding that the motion "is really just a rehashing of the tortured course of discovery in these Superman matters." Even though he was "deeply troubled" by Toberoff's failure to update his privilege logs, he concluded that the behavior did not "rise to willful attempts to mislead" the judge or DC Comics.

 

"In any event, the Court is skeptical of DC's contention that any perceived deception here caused it any real prejudice, as the letters at issue here actually serve more to discredit DC's cries of intentional interference than they do to bolster them," he wrote.

 

Petrocelli, Toberoff and Toberoff's attorney, Laura Brill, of Kendall Brill & Klieger in Los Angeles, did not return calls for comment.

 

Jerome Siegel and Joseph Shuster co-created Superman during the 1930s and later assigned their rights to DC Comics.

 

On May 10, 2004, the Siegel heirs sued DC Comics, seeking to terminate its previous copyright grants to Superman. They alleged trademark infringement and sought unpaid profits. DC Comics filed its suit on May 14, 2010, against Jerome Siegel's widow, Joanne Siegel, and his daughter, Laura Siegel Larson; Mark Warren Peary, the nephew of Joseph Shuster; and Toberoff and his related companies, Pacific Pictures Corp. and IP Worldwide LLC.

 

The studio accused Toberoff and his companies of violating the U.S. Copyright Act by interfering with a 1992 agreement with the Shuster heirs and the 2001 agreement with the Siegel heirs.

 

"In or about 2001, Toberoff learned of these agreements between DC Comics and the Siegel and Shuster heirs and engineered a course of conduct to induce the heirs to repudiate those agreements, file invalid and erroneous copyright termination notices, and enter into new agreements with Toberoff and his companies netting him the controlling stake in the heirs' asserted interests in Superman," Petrocelli wrote in the complaint.

 

Specifically, he alleged that Toberoff induced the Shuster heirs to repudiate their agreement and enter into a 50/50 joint venture with his company, Pacific Pictures.

 

As for the Siegels, Petrocelli alleged that Toberoff told their attorney, Kevin Marks of Gang Tyre Ramer & Brown in Beverly Hills, Calif., that a "billionaire investor" was prepared to pay them $15 million to back out of their agreement with DC Comics, which would have granted them $3 million, and to enter into a new deal with IP Worldwide and his business partner, Ari Emanuel, who heads entertainment talent agency William Morris Endeavor LLC.

 

The original sanctions motion, filed on October 10, accused Toberoff of "gross discovery misconduct" in concealing the letters, which according to Petrocelli showed he had induced the Siegel heirs to break their agreement with DC Comics.

 

"The nature and even existence of these documents were covered up by Toberoff through a systematic course of deceptive conduct dating back to the Siegel lawsuit filed against DC by Toberoff on behalf of the Siegels, and continuing throughout this case," Petrocelli wrote. "Toberoff withheld documents in violation of court orders, submitted fraudulent privilege logs to conceal non-privileged documents, falsely denied the existence and defendants' possession of documents and, when questioned about this by DC and the Court, responded with false and misleading explanations."

 

In the letters, Laura Siegel and her half-brother, Michael Siegel, in 2002 and 2003, specifically discuss the "billionaire investor" and $15 million offer. The studio obtained the letters after they were stolen from Toberoff's office.

 

Brill and Toberoff played down the significance of the letters.

 

"Terminating sanctions cannot be justified," they wrote in a November 14 opposition document. "DC points to no finding that Defendants violated any Court orders, no prior imposition of sanctions – ever – over eight years of litigating this case and Siegel, and no warning by any Court that such sanctions were even a remote possibility."

 

On December 5, Wright denied the motion on jurisdictional grounds, since the discovery at issue was tied to DC Comics' allegation that Toberoff had intervened in repudiating the 2001 agreement – a claim pending before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit at the time. But he allowed DC Comics to renew its motion, which it did on February 4.

 

In his latest order, Wright noted that a November 2, 2002, letter refuted DC Comics' claim because it showed that the Siegel heirs had fired Marks, their previous attorney, six months before they learned about Toberoff's offer.

 

On January 10, the Ninth Circuit reversed a summary judgment ruling for the Siegel heirs, upholding the 2001 agreement with DC Comics. The latest Superman film, Man of Steel, is scheduled for release by DC Comics and Warner Bros. later this year.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I was reading the latest issue of Superman #32 and was surprised to find this amongst the credits:

 

"By special arrangement with the Jerry Siegel family".

 

Now I don't usually read the new Superman books so I'm not sure what to make of this.

 

Is this to mean there was some sort of settlement or has this credit always been on the newer Superman books?

 

Superman32-Page7.jpg

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

It's been in the Superman books for at least the last year. Stems back to the 2001 lawsuit settlement where DC agreed to do just that BUT then... well they didn't. It's back because of threat of lawsuit again.

Link to comment
Share on other sites