Memorandum and Decision Order in SCO v. Novell Aug. 10, 2007, as text
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF UTAH
CENTRAL DIVISION
______________________________________
THE SCO GROUP, INC.,
Plaintiff,
vs.
NOVELL, INC.,
Defendant.
_____________________________________
MEMORANDUM DECISION AND
ORDER
Civil Case No. 2:04CV139DAK
____________________________________
This matter is before the court on the following motions: Novell's Motion for Partial
Summary Judgment or Preliminary Injunction [Docket No. 147]; SCO's
Cross-Motion for
Summary Judgment or Partial Summary Judgment on Novell's Third, Sixth, Seventh, Eighth and
Ninth Counterclaims [Docket No. 180]; Novell's Motion for Summary Judgment on SCO's First
Claim for Slander of Title for Failure to Establish Special Damages [Docket No. 277]; Novell's
Motion for Partial Summary Judgment on SCO's Non-Compete Claims in its Second and Fifth
Claims [Docket No. 273]; Novell's Motion for Partial Summary Judgment on Copyright
Ownership of SCO's Second Claim for Breach of Contract and Fifth Claim for Unfair
Competition [Docket No. 271]; Novell's Motion for Partial Summary Judgment on its Fourth
Claim [Docket No. 171]; SCO's Cross-Motion for Partial Summary Judgment on Novell's
Fourth Claim [Docket No. 224]; SCO's Motion for Partial Summary Judgment on its First,
Second, and Fifth Claims and Novell's First Claim [Docket No. 258]; and Novell's Motion for
Summary Judgment on SCO's First Claim for Slander of Title and Third Claim for Specific
Performance [Docket No. 275]. The court held hearings on these motions on January 23, 2007,
May 31, 2007, and June 4, 2007, and took the motions under advisement. After carefully
considering the memoranda and other materials submitted by the parties, and the law and facts
applicable to these motions, the court issues the following Memorandum Decision and Order.
BACKGROUND
The SCO Group, Inc. ("SCO") began this action in state court asserting a single cause of
action against Novell, Inc. ("Novell") for slander of title based on public statements Novell made
claiming that it had retained the UNIX and UnixWare copyrights when it sold certain assets of its
UNIX and UnixWare business to SCO's predecessor in interest. After Novell removed the case
to this court, the parties proceeded to add several claims and counterclaims to the action. SCO
added claims for breach of the parties' Asset Purchase Agreement and Technology License
Agreement, specific performance, copyright infringement, and unfair competition. Novell added
counterclaims against SCO for slander of title, breach of the Asset Purchase Agreement,
declaratory relief regarding the parties' rights and obligations under the Asset Purchase
Agreement, restitution/unjust enrichment, and accounting.
UNIX was originally developed by AT&T. In 1983, AT&T developed a new version of
UNIX called UNIX System V, Release 1. Other versions were also subsequently developed.
These releases are referred to as SVR1, SVR2, SVR3, and SVR4, or generically SVRX. In 1993,
Novell purchased UNIX-related assets from AT&T's subsidiary, UNIX System Laboratories, and
paid over $300 million for those assets. Decl. Tor Braham at ¶ 4.
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A. The APA and Contemporaneous Agreements
(1) The APA
SCO's predecessor in interest, Santa Cruz Operations Inc.,1 and Novell entered into an
Asset Purchase Agreement ("APA") dated September 19, 1995. Decl. Mark James Ex. 1
("APA"). The APA acknowledges in its "Recitals" section that Novell was "engaged in the
business of developing a line of software products currently known as Unix and UnixWare, the
sale of binary and source code licenses to various versions of Unix and UnixWare, the support of
such products and the sale of other products which are directly related to Unix and UnixWare
(collectively, the "Business")." APA Recital A. It is further stated in the APA that the Boards of
Directors of Novell and Santa Cruz "believe it is in the best interests of each company . . . that
[Santa Cruz] acquire certain of the assets of, and assume certain of the liabilities of [Novell]
comprising the Business (the "Acquisition"). Id. Recital B. As part of the consideration for the
Acquisition, Santa Cruz agreed to issue Novell 6,127,500 shares of Santa Cruz's Common Stock,
which some witnesses have approximated to be worth between $125 to $150 million at the time
of the transaction. Id. Recital C.
Article I of the APA outlines the Acquisition by breaking it down into categories relating
to the purchase of assets, payments, the transfer of customers, non-assignment of certain items,
transitional contracts, the license back of assets, and the closing. Id. §§ 1.1-1.7. The APA's
provision entitled "Purchase and Sale of Assets" provides:
On the terms and subject to the conditions set forth in this
Agreement, Seller will sell, convey, transfer, assign and deliver to
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Buyer and Buyer will purchase and acquire from Seller on the
Closing Date (as defined in Section 1.7) all of Seller's right, title,
and interest in and to the assets and properties of Seller relating to
the Business (collectively the "Assets") identified on Schedule
1.1(a) hereto. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Assets to be so
purchased shall not include those assets (the "Excluded Assets")
set forth on Schedule 1.1(b).
Id. § 1.1(a). With respect to their "Intellectual Property" provisions, Schedule 1.1(a) and
Schedule 1.1(b) are consistent. Schedule 1.1(b) sets forth as Excluded Assets the following
"Intellectual Property": "All copyrights and trademarks, except for the trademarks UNIX and
UnixWare" and "All Patents." Id. Sched. 1.1(b) § V.A, V.B. Schedule 1.1(a) sets forth as Assets
to be transferred the following "Intellectual Property": "Trademarks UNIX and UnixWare as and
to the extent held by Seller (excluding any compensation Seller receives with respect of the
license granted to X/Open regarding the UNIX trademark)." Id. Sched. 1.1(a) § V.
Another significant aspect of the APA is the agreement between the parties with respect
to future SVRX Royalties. Under the payment provisions of the APA, Novell retained "all rights
to the SVRX Royalties notwithstanding the transfer of the SVRX Licenses to [Santa Cruz]." Id.
§ 1.2(b). Santa Cruz agreed to pass through one-hundred percent of the SVRX Royalties to
Novell, and Novell agreed to pay Santa Cruz a five percent administrative fee. Id. Santa Cruz
obtained "legal title and not an equitable interest in such royalties within the meaning of Section
541(d) of the Bankruptcy Code." Id. More specific details of the parties' agreement regarding
SVRX Royalties will be discussed later in this Background Section.
(2) The Bill of Sale
The APA itself did not transfer assets. Rather, it described the assets that would be
transferred in the future when the transaction closed. The APA provided that at the transaction's
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Closing, Novell would deliver a "Bill of Sale" transferring Novell's title to the "Assets"
described in the APA to Santa Cruz. Under Section 1.7 of the APA, Novell was to deliver to
Santa Cruz "all bills of sale, endorsements, assignments, consents to assignments to the extent
obtained and other instruments and documents as [Santa Cruz] may reasonably request to sell,
convey, assign, transfer and deliver to [Santa Cruz] [Novell's] title to all the Assets." Id. §
1.7(b)(iii).
Accordingly, Novell and Santa Cruz executed a "Bill of Sale" on December 6, 2005,
when the transaction closed. Decl. Mark James Ex. 3. The Bill of Sale stated that in accordance
with Section 1.1(a) of the APA, Novell "does hereby transfer, convey, sell, assign, and deliver"
to Santa Cruz "all of the Assets." Id. The Bill of Sale further stated that all capitalized terms had
the meanings set forth in the APA as amended by Amendment No. 1. Id. Therefore, the Assets
so transferred were those listed on Schedule 1.1(a) and not those listed on Schedule 1.1(b). See
APA § 1.1(a). Moreover, the Bill of Sale recognized that it was intended only to document "the
sale and assignment of the Assets to Buyer, and that the [APA] is the exclusive source of the
agreement and understanding between Seller and Buyer respecting the Assets." Decl. Mark
James Ex. 3.
(3) The TLA
The APA also required Santa Cruz to execute a separate license granting Novell the right
to use technology included in the transferred Assets and derivatives, subject to certain
limitations. APA § 1.6. Section 1.6 of the APA states that Santa Cruz must execute a license
agreement concurrent with the Closing of the APA which grants Novell "a royalty-free,
perpetual, worldwide license to (i) all of the technology included in the Assets and (ii) all
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derivatives of the technology included in the Assets." Id.
Novell and Santa Cruz implemented this requirement by executing the Technology
License Agreement ("TLA") on December 6, 1995, in connection with the APA's Closing. Decl.
Mark James Ex. 4 ("TLA"). The TLA states that Novell retains a "non-exclusive, non-terminable, worldwide, fee-free license" to use "Licensed Technology" under certain conditions.
TLA II.A. As with the parties' Bill of Sale, the TLA states that certain defined terms, such as
"Licensed Technology," have the "meanings attributed to such terms in the Asset Purchase
Agreement." Id.
I. The term "Licensed Technology" is defined in the APA as "all of the
technology included in the Assets and all derivatives of the technology included in the Assets."
APA § 1.6.
With regard to internal business operations, the TLA granted Novell an unrestricted
license to "use, reproduce and modify, and authorize its customers to use, reproduce, and modify,
Licensed Technology." TLA II.A.(1). With regard to external use, the TLA granted Novell a
license to "sublicense and distribute, and authorize its customers to sublicense and distribute,
such Licensed Technology and modifications thereof, in source and binary form." Id. II.A.(2).
This license as to external use was subject to the following limitation: "provided, however, that
(1) such technology and modifications may be sublicensed and/or distributed by Novell solely as
part of a bundled or integrated offering ("Composite Offering"); (ii) such Composite Offering
shall not be directly competitive with core application server offerings of SCO, and (iii) the
Licensed Technology shall not constitute a primary portion of the value of such Composite
Offering." Id. SCO contends that these provisions constitute a non-compete provision, whereas
Novell argues that they are merely a limitation on its license.
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The TLA further stated that this limitation "shall cease to exist" in the event of a "Change
of Control" of Santa Cruz. Id. B. The TLA states that "Change of Control" shall have the
meaning attributed to it in the APA. Id. I. Under Section 1.6 of the APA, which provides for the
license back of assets and which provides the basis for entering the TLA, it states that "the
license agreement shall also provide [Novell] with an unlimited royalty-free, perpetual,
worldwide license to the Licensed Technology upon the occurrence of a Change of Control of
[Santa Cruz] described in Section 6.3(c) hereof." APA § 1.6. Section 6.3(c) of the APA is
entitled "Expansion of Seller's Rights Relating to the Licensed Technology upon a Change of
Control" and provides that
[u]ntil two (2) years from the Closing Date, in the event [Santa
Cruz] has merged with, sold shares representing 50% or more of
the voting power of [Santa Cruz] to, sold all or substantially all of
[Santa Cruz's] assets to, or engaged voluntarily in any other change
of control transaction with, any party identified by [Novell] on
Schedule 6.3(a) hereof, or in the event any party identified by
[Novell] on Schedule 6.3(a) hereof, shall acquire shares
representing 50% or more of the voting power of [Santa Cruz],
[Novell] shall automatically have unlimited, royalty-free, perpetual
rights to the Licensed Technology.
Id. § 6.3(c).
Section 1.6 of the APA further provides that "[i]n the event of a Change of Control of
[Novell] (as described in Section 6.6 hereof), the license granted pursuant to the license
agreement shall be limited to [Novell's] products either developed or substantially developed as
of the time of the Change of Control." Id. § 1.6. Section 6.6(c) of the APA is entitled "Change
of Control" and provides that
For purposes of this Agreement, a "Change of Control" with
respect to one party shall be deemed to have occurred whenever (i)
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there shall be consummated (1) any consolidation or merger of
such party in which such party is not the continuing or surviving
corporation, or pursuant to which shares of such party's common
stock would be converted in whole or in part into cash, other
securities or other property, other than a merger of such person in
which the holders of such party's common stock immediately prior
to the merger have substantially the same proportionate ownership
of common stock of the surviving corporation immediately after
the merger, or (2) any sale, lease, exchange or transfer (in one
transaction or a series of related transactions) of all or substantially
all the assets of such party, or . . . (v) any other event shall occur
with respect to such party that would be required to be reported in
response to Item 6(e) (or any successor provision) of Schedule 14A
of Regulation 14A promulgated under the Exchange Act."
Id. § 6.6(c)
In 2001, Santa Cruz sold its UNIX business to Caldera Systems, Inc., the immediate
predecessor to SCO. The assets sold by Santa Cruz included all of the UNIX assets that it had
purchased from Novell in 1995, plus other assets that collectively accounted for 100% of Santa
Cruz's operating income and 94.7% of its net revenues.
In the TLA, the parties recognized that the TLA and the APA "constitute the entire
understanding between the parties with respect to its subject matter, and supersede all prior
understandings, both written and oral, between them relating to such subject matter." TLA VIII.
(4) Amendment No. 1
On December 6, 1995, a few months after the APA was signed and the date the
transaction closed, Novell and Santa Cruz signed Amendment No. 1. Decl. Mark James Ex. 2
("Am. No.1"). Amendment No. 1 made several clarifying amendments, including specific
revisions to Schedule 1.1(a) and 1.1(b). Am No. 1 ¶¶ K, L. "All other terms and conditions of
the [APA] remain[ed] in full force and effect." Am. No. 1 at 10. Amendment No. 1 did not
8
change the description of Intellectual Property that was included and excluded from the
transferred Assets under Schedules 1.1(a) and 1.1(b). See id. ¶¶ K, L.
Amendment No. 1 also made amendments to the APA with respect to the agreement
regarding SVRX Licenses and Royalties that will be discussed in a later section.
(5) Extrinsic Evidence
Both parties have submitted a substantial amount of evidence in connection with the
negotiation and execution of the APA and its amendments, as well as the parties' conduct after
the APA was signed.
(a) Purpose of Agreement
Santa Cruz's stated purpose for entering the APA with Novell and acquiring the UNIX
and UnixWare business was to be the supplier of Unix to the industry and to develop a future
consolidated version of Unix that ran on an Intel processor. Decl. Mark James Ex. 6 ("Mohan
Dep.") at 38-39. Beyond that, SCO has provided little evidence as to its intent with respect to
specific provisions of the Agreement or its business strategy for structuring such a complex
relationship between the parties. Novell, however, has produced significant evidence as to its
business strategy and intent with respect to specific provisions.
In early 1995, Novell decided to divest itself of certain UNIX-related assets. Decl. James
R. Tolonen at ¶ 4. Although Novell wanted to sell the entire UNIX and UnixWare business to
focus on its Netware product, it became clear during negotiations with Santa Cruz that Santa
Cruz could not afford to purchase the entirety of Novell's UNIX and UnixWare assets and rights.
Id. ¶ 4. Consequently, Novell and Santa Cruz focused on a more limited deal that also included
a forward looking revenue stream for Novell.
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Novell has submitted evidence that an important consideration for its sale of UNIX assets
was Santa Cruz's commitment to develop enhanced UnixWare products that were compatible
with Novell's Netware product. The APA required Santa Cruz to develop a merged product that
would combine Novell's version of the UNIX operating system with Santa Cruz's version of
UNIX. APA § 4.18. Novell and Santa Cruz hoped that the merged product would provide a
commercially successful alternative to Microsoft's Windows system. Decl. Tor Braham at ¶ 8.
Novell's Netware product needed an alternative operating system if it was to compete with
Microsoft. Id. Novell also had a strong interest in the development of a commercially successful
UNIX operating system that would run on Intel's 64-bit processors because it would expand the
market for Netware. Id. ¶ 13-14; Decl. David Bradford at ¶ 1, 3; Decl. James Tolonen at ¶ 12.
Novell had concerns about entrusting the future of UNIX and Novell's UNIX-related
interests to Santa Cruz. Decl. David Bradford at ¶ 7. David Bradford, Novell's Senior Vice
President and General Counsel, states that there were serious concerns about Santa Cruz's
viability as a company, and Novell became focused on building in protections for Novell in the
event that Santa Cruz went bankrupt. Id. ¶ 8.
First, Santa Cruz was given legal title to SVRX Licenses "and not equitable interest in
such royalties within the meaning of Section 541(d) of the Bankruptcy Code." APA § 1.2(b).
According to the principal drafter of the APA, Tor Braham, this provision was added to decrease
the risk that Novell's receipt of SVRX revenues would be impacted if Santa Cruz went into
bankruptcy. Decl. Tor Braham ¶ 10.
Second, Novell asserts that it intended to exclude all copyrights from the assets to be
transferred in order to protect its future SVRX revenues. Id. at 18-19; Decl. David Bradford ¶¶
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11-12; Decl James Tolonen ¶ 11. In the event Santa Cruz went into bankruptcy, the UNIX and
UnixWare copyrights would not be part of the bankruptcy estate and the bankruptcy trustee could
not assert an interest in them. Decl. Tor Braham ¶ 14, Decl David Bradford ¶ 9; Decl. James
Tolonen ¶ 12. Excluding copyrights from the transferred assets also protected Novell's other
UNIX-related interests. Retaining ownership of the copyrights would strengthen Novell's rights
to negotiate buy-outs of the SVRX Licenses and to receive future revenues. Decl. Tor Braham ¶
14; Decl. James Tolonen ¶ 12. Furthermore, it put Novell in a better position to ensure
successful development of future versions of the UNIX operating system.
SCO's extrinsic evidence regarding Santa Cruz's inability to proceed with a cash deal
appears to conflict. Many of SCO's witnesses refer to the value of the stock Santa Cruz provided
as consideration as evidence that such a sum would purchase Novell's whole UNIX-related
business. Such testimony, however, is at odds with other witness testimony stating that the deal
would not have proceeded without the creation of a future revenue stream for Novell. Testimony
that additional revenue was necessary is consistent with the amount Novell paid for its
acquisition of UNIX assets from AT&T and the fact that the shares of stock Santa Cruz
transferred were only part of the consideration provided in the APA.
The consideration provided through future royalties significantly complicated the
agreement and the parties' ongoing relationship. SCO, however, has provided virtually no
evidence from its perspective as to the purpose of or strategy behind the creation of a continuing
stream of revenue for Novell other than some testimony that it could not afford to acquire it and
the deal would not have proceeded otherwise.
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(b) Drafts of Agreement
The correspondence between Novell and Santa Cruz prior to the date the APA was signed
shows that significant revisions were made to the agreement. A September 8, 1995 draft of
Schedule 1.1(a), which listed the assets to be transferred, included "all patents, patent
applications, copyrights . . . and all other intellectual property . . . that pertain to Unix or
UnixWare." Decl. Tor Braham at ¶ 15, Ex. 6.
Novell's outside counsel drafted a new schedule of assets to be included in the asset
transfer as well as a schedule of assets to be excluded from the transfer. Id. ¶ 15. The new
Schedule 1.1(a) deleted copyrights, patents, and all other intellectual property from the assets to
be transferred. The revised Schedule 1.1(a) included only the UNIX and UnixWare trademarks
as the "Intellectual Property" included in the transaction. The new Schedule 1.1(b), which listed
the assets excluded from the transfer, listed all copyrights, all patents, and all trademarks except
for the UNIX and UnixWare trademarks.
Novell submitted evidence demonstrating that during the negotiations, David Bradford,
Tor Braham, Aaron Alter, and Burt Levine all reviewed and approved the language in the
Excluded Assets Schedule 1.1(b). Id. ¶ 16. SCO has not provided evidence from witnesses on
the Santa Cruz side of the transaction with respect to their review of the asset schedules. In fact,
there is no evidence from any of Santa Cruz's outside counsel and very little evidence from Santa
Cruz's in-house legal department regarding the drafting of the APA.
(c) Parties' Conduct
Both parties have also submitted in support of their respective interpretations of the APA
extrinsic evidence of the parties' conduct in relation to the APA.
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The day before the APA was signed, David Bradford, Novell's Senior Vice President and
General Counsel, presented the agreement to the Novell Board of Directors for approval and
reviewed its terms with them. The minutes from that board meeting state: "RESOLVED . . .
Pursuant to the Asset Purchase Agreement . . . Novell will retain all of its patents, copyrights,
and trademarks (except for the trademarks UNIX and UnixWare) . . . ." Decl. David Bradford at
¶¶ 13-14, Ex. 1.
On September 20, 1995, SCO claims that the parties issued a joint press release regarding
the APA, stating that "[a]ccording to the terms of the agreement, SCO will acquire Novell's
UnixWare business and UNIX intellectual property." Novell questions whether it was a "joint"
press release because unlike a typical joint press release, the September 20, 1995 press release
does not contain Novell's logo, contact information, or company description. Instead, it contains
information only for Santa Cruz. In any event, the press release does not provide specific
information about whether copyrights transferred. It is undisputed that trademarks did transfer,
which would account for a statement that intellectual property passed. However, the vague use
of the term "intellectual property" could not be read to include all intellectual property because it
is also undisputed that no patents were transferred. Therefore, the press release, whether a joint
statement or not, provides little information in its reference to unspecified "intellectual
property." Novell also issued two press releases about the APA, which are on Novell's website,
and neither mention of the transfer of copyrights or, more broadly, the transfer of intellectual
property.
On October 4, 1995, two weeks after the signing of the APA, David Bradford certified a
Notification and Report Form to the Federal Trade Commission. Decl. Mark James Ex. 84. The
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language used in the Form was consistent with the language of the APA's "Recitals," stating that
Santa Cruz was acquiring "certain assets" of Novell's UNIX and UnixWare business. Id. In a
section of the Form entitled "Assets to be Acquired," Novell stated: "The assets to be acquired by
SCO are described with particularity in Schedule 1.1(a) of the Agreement." Id. Schedule 1.1(a)
was the list of assets included in the transfer. Novell also included specific portions of Schedule
1.1(a) in the Form which SCO claims could be read to mean that the whole business transferred.
The Form, however, clearly directed the FTC to the Agreement for the details regarding the
assets being transferred.
After the APA closed in December 1995, Santa Cruz came into physical possession of the
UNIX copyright registrations because they were kept in the business files of the UNIX unit in
New Jersey, which transferred to Santa Cruz under the APA. Decl. Mark James Ex. 23-25. The
UNIX unit and its business files remained in New Jersey throughout the changes in ownership of
the business--from AT&T to UNIX System Laboratories to Novell to Santa Cruz. Burt Levine
Dep. at 19-20. SCO asserts that its possession of these registrations is evidence that the parties
intended to transfer UNIX and UnixWare copyrights under the APA. Novell contests that this
evidence is relevant or indicative of the parties' intent under the APA. Novell makes no
assertion that it ever attempted to remove the registrations from the New Jersey facility or
otherwise obtain physical possession of them. Greg Jones 30(b)(6) Dep. at 177-79. Rather,
Novell comments only that the physical possession of the registrations was not a concern or
viewed as a necessity to it.
Since 1995, Santa Cruz and SCO have shipped UNIX-related products with copyright
notices affixed to them and entered into hundreds of license agreements for UNIX Products
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containing express representations and warranties of SCO's rights and ownership in the
intellectual property required to provide the licensed product. Decl. Edward Normand Ex. 27,
28. Novell notes that products were shipped with joint copyright notices that indicated Novell's
original UNIX and UnixWare code and SCO's ownership of modifications to that code. For
example, one of the joint copyright notices states: "Copyright 1996 The Santa Cruz Operation,
Inc. All rights reserved. Copyright 1984-1995 Novell, Inc. All rights reserved." Decl. James
McKenna at ¶ 5. SCO claims that this copyright notice indicates that Novell transferred the
copyrights in 1995 under the APA, and Novell contends that the notice indicates Novell's
continued ownership of the copyright to the original UnixWare code and SCO's ownership only
of the copyright to modifications to that code made the year after the APA (1996). Furthermore,
Novell asserts that if Santa Cruz owned the copyright to both the original code and the derivative
work, the copyright notice would not have mentioned Novell at all.
With respect to licenses containing any incorrect representations and warranties, Novell
contends it was not aware of any such licenses. Novell claims that the first license agreement
with Integration Design does not appear to involve UNIX and UnixWare licenses so it would not
have been necessary to submit it to Novell for approval. Normand Decl. Ex. 30. SCO itself has
admitted that the other two licenses, with Lucent Technologies and Samsung Electronics, also
did not need to be shown to Novell for approval. Supp. Brakebill Decl. Ex. 25, Response No. 7.
In any event, none of these three licenses contains any representation or warranty of SCO's
copyright ownership.
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(d) Witness Testimony
There is extrinsic evidence from several individuals who were involved at different stages
of the negotiations of the APA and from business people involved in the transition of the
business to Santa Cruz. Interestingly, many of the witnesses who were on the Novell side of the
APA transaction went to work for Santa Cruz as a result of the deal. The relevance of much of
the testimony is questionable because few have a recollection of actual discussions regarding the
transfer or retention of copyrights. Many witnesses give an opinion as to whether they think the
copyrights should have transferred, but they fail to establish an adequate foundation to support
their opinion. Given the volume of the testimony presented to the court and the number of
attorneys and business people involved in the transaction, it is surprising that there is not more
testimony on the drafting and negotiation of the intellectual property provisions from both sides
of the deal.
Novell was represented in the transaction by the law firm of Wilson, Sonsini, Goodrich
& Rosati ("Wilson Sonsini"). Tor Braham managed Wilson Sonsini's team, was the primary
negotiator with respect to the contract language, and was the primary drafter of the APA text.2
Braham testified that the APA was not a "straight up asset purchase" because Santa Cruz did not
have the cash to buy both the UNIX assets that Novell had purchased in 1993 plus Novell's
UnixWare business. Decl. Tor Braham ¶ 7. As a result, the deal became more complex, and
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Novell needed to negotiate provisions into the contract to protect its business and legal interests.
Id.
Braham had regular communications with Novell's General Counsel, David Bradford,
and tried to achieve Novell's goals as communicated by Bradford. Id. ¶ 6. During the
negotiations, Bradford indicated to Braham that Novell was unwilling to transfer intellectual
property rights in UNIX and UnixWare, including patents and copyrights. Id. ¶ 14. Accordingly,
Braham's team revised an early draft of a Schedule of Assets that had included patents,
copyrights, and trademarks and drafted a new schedule of included assets and a schedule of
excluded assets. Id. ¶ 15. Braham also made changes to Section 1.1(a) of the APA where the
distinction between included and excluded asset schedules is made with respect to the assets
transferred. Id. ¶ 19.
Braham testified that to his knowledge, and based on his review of the Wilson Sonsini
files, at least four representatives of Novell reviewed and approved the excluded assets provision.
Id. ¶ 16. During the course of the negotiations, the Wilson Sonsini team transmitted drafts of the
two schedules to Santa Cruz representatives, and drafts would be redlined to show changes. Id. ¶
17. Braham testified that although the APA did not transfer copyright ownership to Santa Cruz,
Santa Cruz received other rights and interests in UNIX and UnixWare that gave it a license to
copy and use Novell's copyrighted code as needed to implement the activities contemplated by
the APA. Furthermore, it was Braham's understanding that while Novell retained the copyrights
in the original code, Santa Cruz would own the copyrights in any code that it wrote and Novell
would need a license to such code. Id. ¶ 23. Therefore, Braham added the term "Licensed
Technology" in Section 1.6 of the APA during the drafting process to refer to newly developed
17
code and other technology in UNIX and UnixWaresuch as trade secrets, software know-how,
etc.that were not excluded from the assets transferred to Santa Cruz. Id. ¶¶ 22, 23.
Robert Frankenberg, then-President and CEO of Novell, testified in a deposition that his
initial intent in entering into negotiations, intent at the time the APA was signed, and intent when
the transaction closed was that Novell would transfer copyrights to UNIX and UnixWare
technology to Santa Cruz. Decl. Mark James Ex. 7 ("Frankenberg Dep.") at 7, 135. This
testimony is obviously at odds with the minutes of the Board meeting and the testimony of the
chief drafters of the APA for Novell. Somewhat self-contradictorily as well, Frankenberg also
testified that he had high-level discussions with the negotiating team and recalled discussing the
fact that retaining UNIX copyrights would facilitate Novell's exercise of rights with respect to
capitalizing the SVRX revenue stream and facilitate the negotiation of SVRX License buyouts.
Id. at 65-66, 68. The evidence submitted as to Frankenberg's role shows that he was not
intimately involved in the deal. Frankenberg testified that he was involved in high-level
discussions but was not involved in the negotiation or drafting of the APA. He further stated that
he did not review the details of the deal and he signed the APA on the basis of the
recommendation of his team. Id. at 68.
David Bradford, Novell's Senior Vice President and General Counsel, oversaw the
negotiation and drafting of a contract between Novell and Santa Cruz. Decl. David Bradford at ¶
4. During the negotiations of the APA, he discussed with Braham the need to increase Novell's
protections in the transaction, including but not limited to retaining Novell's intellectual property
rights in UNIX and UnixWare. Id. ¶ 9. Bradford testified that the exclusion of copyrights was
intentional and "should any person suggest otherwise, they are mistaken." Id. ¶ 12. Bradford
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reviewed the terms of the APA with the Novell Board of Directors at a meeting held on
September 18, 1995, the day before the APA was signed. Id. ¶ 13. Bradford received the final
APA on the day it was executed and was responsible for reviewing it and approving it for final
signature by Frankenberg. Id. ¶ 17. Bradford wrote a memorandum reflecting his approval of
the APA. Id. He testified in this litigation that he still agrees with the statement that the APA is
"an accurate reflection of the business and legal terms and conditions negotiated between the
parties." Id.
James Tolonen, Novell's Chief Financial Officer from 1989 through 1998, testified that
he was actively involved in the preparation of the APA. Tolonen Decl. ¶¶ 3, 7. Tolonen
interacted with Bradford, who he described as the "point person" heading up Novell's
negotiation team, and Braham. Id. ¶¶ 8, 9. Tolonen reviewed drafts of the APA and reviewed
the final version of the APA to ensure that its terms were consistent with the intent of the deal.
Id. ¶¶ 9, 10. Tolonen testified that "[a]s reflected in the plain language of the executed [APA],
Novell intended to retain and did retain, as an `Excluded Asset,' all copyrights, including all
UNIX and UnixWare copyrights." Id. ¶ 11.
Ed Chatlos, Novell's Senior Director for UNIX Strategic Partnerships and Business
Development, was a primary negotiator for Novell during the business negotiation of the deal.
Chatlos' Declaration states that he left Novell voluntarily in 1996, but it does not indicate his
current employment. Decl. Mark James Ex. 12 ("Chatlos Decl.") at ¶ 4. He did disclose in his
deposition, however, that his wife has been employed by SCO since the time of the APA in 1995.
Decl. Mark James Ex. 13 ("Chatlos Dep.") at 49. During the business negotiations of the APA,
Chatlos recalled disputes over the price because SCO could not pay the full purchase price as
19
contemplated by Novell. Id. at 36. He testified that the royalty payments were used as a
resolution to bridge the gap. Id. Chatlos also testified that there was no discussion about
excluding or including copyrights because he believes it was implicit in the deal that the
copyrights would be transferred. Id. at 122-24. He testified that he was not involved in any
discussions with Novell's negotiation team regarding concerns of a potential bankruptcy by Santa
Cruz. However, he also testified that he believes that the APA reflects the intent of the
agreement. Id. at 130. Although he continued to review drafts of the agreement, his deposition
testimony reflects that he had little recollection of the work done by Novell's legal team. Id. at
105. He could not recollect David Bradford's role in the deal or the names of the attorneys at
Wilson Sonsini who worked on the APA. Id. at 37, 80.
Duff Thompson, a former Novell executive who now chairs SCO's litigation committee,
testified that testified that his recollection of the deal was the initial direction from Frankenberg
to sell the whole business. Decl. Mark James Ex. 10 ("Thompson Decl.") at ¶ 4. Thompson did
not recall "any specific discussions around copyrights" or any "discussion with SCO about the
excluded asset schedule" during negotiation of the deal. Decl. Mark James Ex. 11 ("Thompson
Dep.") at 86. Ty Mattingly testified that Thompson was "not really involved in the details of the
Novell, Santa Cruz transaction." Mattingly Dep. at 70-71. He stated that Thompson was
"checked out" during the drafting of the APA and was "not in the office that often." Id. at 71-72.
He also testified that he relied on Tor Braham and his team for the detail drafting of the
agreement. Id. at 30-31. Braham confirmed that Thompson "was not involved in negotiating or
drafting the APA contract language." Decl. Tor Braham ¶ 24. However, Thompson testified that
if Novell had intended to retain the copyrights, it would have said "you get all the business
20
except the copyrights." Thompson Dep. at 133.
Ty Mattingly, Novell's Vice President for Strategic Relations at the time of the APA,
testified in his deposition that it was his belief that Novell sold the Unix business to SCO, and
that SCO paid roughly 125 million dollars because it bought the UNIX business from Novell
"basically in its entirety." Decl. Mark James Ex. 9 ("Mattingly Dep.") at 10. He further
explained that his view was that "[t]he only things that did not go with that was a kind of an
agent relationship whereby SCO was collecting the SVRX royalties from existing OEMs at the
time we sold that business and then giving the bulk of those moneys back to Novell." Id. at 29-
32. Mattingly, however, also testified that his role "related only to high level business strategy"
and he was "not involved in the details of the legal document." Id. at 66. He admitted that he
was involved "very superficially" in the "last two or three weeks before the contract was
executed," which was "when the back and forth concerning the legal provisions was taking
place." Id. at 68-69.
Burt Levine, a former Novell in-house attorney who went to work for Santa Cruz after the
APA, testified that he worked on some early drafts of the APA but cannot remember which
specific provisions. Levine did testify, however, that during APA negotiations, he reviewed and
marked up drafts of Schedules 1.1(a) and (b). Decl. Mark James Ex. 14 ("Levine Dep.") at 72-74. He revised the list of included assets but did not add copyrights. Id. at 74. He then faxed his
markup to outside counsel, who passed on his comments to Santa Cruz's outside counsel,
Brobeck Phleger. Id. at 72-73, 77-80. However, he testified that he would have been surprised
to hear that Novell retained the UNIX and UnixWare copyrights. Assuming, however, that the
copyrights were excluded from the APA, he testified that SCO would have an inherent license to
21
use those copyrights in the business. Id. at 89.
William Broderick, a contract manager and member of the Novell APA transition team
who is now the Director of Software Licensing for SCO, testified that his understanding of the
sale of assets was that the UNIX copyrights were transferred. Decl. Mark James Ex. 15
("Broderick Decl.") ¶¶ 1, 6, 11. Although SCO claims that Broderick testified that his
understanding was based on Novell's explanation of the transaction during company-wide
meetings and meetings of the transition team, he testified in his deposition that he did not recall
any specific discussion about the transfer of copyrights. Id. Ex. 16 ("Broderick Dep.") at 49-51.
Alok Mohan, CEO of Santa Cruz at the time of the APA, testified that he believes Santa
Cruz bought the whole business, including copyrights. Mohan Dep. at 138-40. But he was not
aware that the subject of UNIX copyrights was specifically addressed in the contract. Id. at 143-
44. Mohan testified that he was involved in the negotiations "only at a high level," not in the
"detail level of negotiations." Id. at 10-11. He was also not involved in the "specific drafting of
the documents," was not on a distribution list of individuals at Santa Cruz to receive drafts of the
agreement, and did not recall the firm or attorneys Santa Cruz hired to represent it in the
transaction. Id. at 10-11, 14-17. He testified that "the issue of copyrights in or out was not
discussed with me." Id. 261-62. Furthermore, he contends that Novell did not tell him that it
had kept the copyrights, but he also admits that Novell did not tell him that it had given them to
Santa Cruz either. Id. at 261-262. He did believe, however, that Santa Cruz "tried to make the
document represent . . . the intent . . . . And we captured, I thought at that time, what the intent
was." Id. at 13.
22
Doug Michels, Senior Vice President of Santa Cruz at the time of the APA, stated in his
deposition that "the only way that I know of, and anyone on my team knew of, to buy a software
business is to buy the copyrights, and there is no way we would have ever done a deal to buy a
software business where we didn't get the copyrights and all the other intellectual property."
Decl. Mark James Ex. 18 ("Michels Dep.") at 134. Michels testified that he was very involved in
the initiation of the APA, but that he was only involved in two or three meetings with Novell
after the initial discussion about the deal. Id. at 11-12. He did not draft any language of the APA
or review drafts of it. He does not recall "even vaguely" any debates in which he participated
regarding the drafting of the APA. Id. at 12-13. He also does not recall any discussion by
anyone either at Novell or Santa Cruz regarding the transfer or retention of UNIX copyrights. Id.
at 50-52.
Jim Wilt, a business development executive at Santa Cruz, testified that it was his
understanding and intent during the negotiations that SCO would acquire Novell's entire UNIX
and UnixWare business, including the copyrights. Decl. Mark James Ex. 19 ("Wilt Decl.") ¶ 8.
He viewed the copyrights as essential to the acquisition of a software company. Id. Ex. 20
("Wilt Dep.") at 76-80. Although SCO refers to Wilt as the lead negotiator for Santa Cruz, Ed
Chatlos testified that Wilt "dropped out" in the latter half of the negotiations of the Santa Cruz-
Novell deal and Wilt, himself, concurred that he was less active at the end of the negotiations
when the APA was being drafted. Chatlos IBM Dep. at 184-185; Wilt Dep. at 20-21. He also
testified that the lawyers did the drafting of the APA. Wilt testified that he did not recall anyone
from Novell stating that copyrights were being transferred. Wilt Dep. 57-59.
23
SCO also relies on the understanding of Kimberlee Madsen, a paralegal in Santa Cruz's
legal department. Decl. Mark James Ex. 22 ("Madsen Dep.") at 6-7. She testified that she
participated in the negotiations leading up to the drafting of APA and reviewed and drafted some
of the agreement. Madsen Dep. at 13. She testified that it was always her understanding that the
UNIX copyrights were part of the assets Santa Cruz purchased and she could not recall anyone in
the negotiation team discussing the retention of copyrights. Id. at 79.
B. Amendment No. 2 to the APA
Approximately a year after the APA was signed, on October 16, 1996, Novell and Santa
Cruz executed Amendment No. 2 to the APA. Decl. Mark James Ex. 5 ("Am. No. 2"). APA
Amendment No. 2 amends the Schedule of Excluded Assets in Schedule 1.1(b) to exclude "All
copyrights and trademarks, except for the copyrights and trademarks owned by Novell as of the
date of the [APA] required for SCO to exercise its rights with respect to the acquisition of UNIX
and UnixWare technologies." Am. No. 2 § A.
Amendment No. 2 did not specify which copyrights, if any, were "required for SCO to
exercise its rights with respect to the acquisition of the UNIX and UnixWare technologies."
Amendment No. 2 also did not contain any provision actually transferring ownership of
copyrights or other assets from Novell to Santa Cruz. Amendment No. 2 states that the APA was
amended "[a]s of the 16th day of October 1996." Id. Therefore, it did not retroactively amend the
APA as of the date the APA was signed or the date the transaction closed. Furthermore, the
parties did not execute a "Bill of Sale" or any similar document transferring copyrights from
Novell to Santa Cruz in connection with Amendment No. 2, nor did they amend the previous Bill
24
of Sale. Moreover, Amendment No. 2 did not make any corresponding amendment to the
transferred assets on Schedule 1.1(a).
During negotiations on Amendment No. 2, SCO attempted to effectuate a transfer of the
copyrights of UNIX and UnixWare, but Novell rejected the proposal. Decl. Allison Amadia at ¶
6, 8, 10. During the summer of 1996, Steve Sabbath, Santa Cruz's General Counsel, telephoned
Allison Amadia, in-house counsel for Novell, about amending the APA. Id. ¶ 6. She testifies
that Sabbath stated to her that the original APA explicitly excluded copyrights to UNIX and
UnixWare and that Santa Cruz wanted to amend the original to give Santa Cruz those copyrights.
Id.
Amadia had not been involved in the original deal. After her conversation with Sabbath,
she reviewed the APA and contacted Novell's outside counsel, Tor Braham, to gain his
understanding of the transaction. Id. ¶ 7. Through these efforts, she learned that ownership of
the UNIX and UnixWare copyrights did not transfer to Santa Cruz under the APA. Id.
Sabbath later sent Amadia a draft proposal revising Schedule 1.1(b) of the APA to read:
"All copyrights and trademarks, except for the copyrights and trademarks owned by Novell as of
the date of this Amendment No.2, which pertain to the UNIX and UnixWare technologies and
which SCO has acquired hereunder. . . ." Id. ¶ 8, Ex. 1. Novell rejected the proposed
amendment. Id. ¶ 10. Amadia told Sabbath that while Novell was willing to affirm that Santa
Cruz had a license under the APA to use Novell's UNIX and UnixWare copyrighted works in its
business, Novell would not transfer ownership of any copyrights. Id.
Instead of a blanket exception for copyrights pertaining to UNIX and UnixWare
technologies, the final version of Amendment No. 2 was limited to copyrights that were
25
"required for SCO to exercise its rights with respect to the acquisition of the UNIX and
UnixWare technologies." Amend. No. 2 § A. The final version of Amendment No. 2 also
deleted Santa Cruz's proposed reference to copyrights "which SCO has acquired hereunder."
Amendment No. 2 does not include any reference to an acquisition or transfer of copyrights.
Jim Tolonen, Novell's Chief Financial Officer and Novell's business executive assigned
to Amendment No. 2, confirms that it was never Novell's intent to transfer copyrights by way of
Amendment No. 2. Decl. Jim Tolonen at ¶ 13, 14. He states that he would not have signed it if
he had believed it would do so. Id. ¶ 15. He testifies that Amendment No. 2 was also not meant
to "clarify" what the parties intended to transfer in the original APA. Id. ¶ 14. Rather, he states
that Novell intended to retain the UNIX and UnixWare copyrights in the APA, and Amendment
No. 2 confirmed that Santa Cruz would be allowed to continue to use the Novell-retained
copyrightsas it had been doingas was required to exercise its rights under the APA. Id. ¶ 16.
Sabbath has no recollection of negotiating the copyright portion of Amendment No. 2.
SCO relies on the testimony of Robert Frankenberg and Ed Chatlos regarding Amendment No. 2.
However, both men had left Novell before Amendment No. 2 was negotiated and had no
involvement in the negotiation of the amendment. Frankenberg Dep. at 86; Chatlos Decl. ¶ 4.
SCO relies on the testimony of several other individuals involved in the business, but none of
them admits to being involved in the negotiations of Amendment No. 2 or to having any specific
recollection of the negotiations with respect to the transfer of copyrights.
C. Santa Cruz/Caldera Assignment Agreement
Santa Cruz assigned various items of intellectual property to Caldera in an agreement
dated May 7, 2001 ("Assignment Agreement"). Supp. Brakebill Decl. Ex. 1 ("Caldera
26
Agreement"). That Assignment Agreement purports to transfer various UNIX and UnixWare
copyrights. Caldera Agreement § 1, Sched. C. In the Assignment Agreement, Santa Cruz made
representations and warranties with respect to the intellectual property rights being transferred.
Id. § 8(v). The Assignment Agreement states that Santa Cruz "has no knowledge of any fact that
would prevent [Caldera's] registration of any Rights related or appurtenant to the Inventions and
Works or recording the transfer of Rights hereunder (except that Assignor may not be able to
establish a chain of title from Novell Inc. but shall diligently endeavor to do so as soon as
possible)." Id.
The initial draft of the Assignment Agreement had provided an unlimited representation
and warranty from Santa Cruz. Supp. Brakebill Decl. Ex. 5, at § 8(v). In transmitting the draft,
Caldera's attorney proposed that Santa Cruz's assignment of intellectual property obtained from
Novell would require the inclusion in the Assignment Agreement of "a single exhibit from the
Novell/SCO Asset Purchase Agreement." Id. at 1. Four days later, an in-house attorney at Santa
Cruz responded with a redlined draft that included an exception to Santa Cruz's representation
and warranty stating "[e]xcept for the inability to obtain third party acknowledgments to establish
a chain of title." Id. Ex. 6 at § 8(v). Four days later, Caldera's counsel circulated a final draft of
the agreement with a cover email stating that Santa Cruz was "trying to get Novell to sign a
global IP assignment, for chain of title purposes." Id. Ex. 7 at 1. But the final draft recognized
that Santa Cruz may not be able to establish a chain of title from Novell. Id. Ex. 1 at § 8(v).
D. Private Communications Between SCO and Novell
In late 2002, Darl McBride, SCO's CEO, contacted Novell on several occasions seeking
copies of records concerning SCO's intellectual property rights to UNIX. Greg Jones Decl. ¶ 13.
27
On January 4, 2003, McBride received an email from Michael Anderer, a consultant for SCO
retained to examine its intellectual property. Supp. Brakebill Decl. Ex. 12. Anderer stated that
the APA "transferred substantially less" of Novell's intellectual property than Novell owned.
Anderer noted that Santa Cruz's "asset purchase" from Novell "excludes all patents, copyrights,
and just about everything else." Id. Anderer cautioned that "[w]e really need to be clear on what
we can license. It may be a lot less than we think."
On February 4, 2003, McBride contacted Christopher Stone, Vice Chairman of Novell,
and stated that he wanted Novell to "amend" the APA to give SCO "the copyrights to UNIX."
Supp. Brakebill Decl. Ex. 17; id. Ex. 18 ("Stone Dep." at 108-09). Then, on February 25, 2003,
McBride twice called a Novell employee in business development, David Wright, and said,
"SCO needs the copyrights." Wright passed on McBride's request to Novell's in-house legal
department. Supp. Brakebill Decl. Ex. 13. McBride's request was memorialized in an email
written that day by a Novell in-house attorney, Greg Jones. Id.
Also early in 2003, McBride and Chris Sontag of SCO contacted Greg Jones regarding
the UNIX copyrights. Id. Ex. 8 ("Decl. Greg Jones") at ¶¶ 13, 14; Decl. Christopher S. Sontag ¶
6. McBride stated that "the asset purchase agreement excluded copyrights from being
transferred" and that it was a "clerical error." Jones Dep. at 182. On February 20, 2003, Chris
Sontag also sent a draft letter to Novell that sought to clarify the parties' rights under the APA.
Decl. Christopher S. Sontag Ex.
Again in March 2003, McBride called Stone to ask him if Novell would "give him some
changes so he could have the copyrights." Christopher Stone Dep. at 248-49. Ralph Yarro,
Chairman of SCO, requested an in-person meeting with Stone. In that meeting, on May 14,
28
2003, Yarro told Stone that he wanted Novell to amend the APA to give SCO the copyrights.
Supp. Brakebill Decl. Ex. 17 at 4; Stone Dep. at 137-8. Stone refused. Id. On May 19, 2003,
McBride called Stone and Joe LaSala, Novell's General Counsel, and again requested that Novell
convey the copyrights to SCO. McBride said, "we only need you to amend the contract so that
we can have the copyrights." Stone Dep. 249-250. Stone made notes in June 2003
memorializing both conversations. Supp. Brakebill Decl. Ex. 17.
E. SCOsource Initiative
In approximately this same time frame, in January 2003, SCO launched its SCOsource
initiative, which was an effort to obtain license fees from Linux users based on claims to Unix
System V intellectual property. McBride commented that "SCO owns much of the core UNIX
intellectual property, and has full rights to license this technology and enforce the associated
patents and copyrights."
Under the SCOsource licensing program, SCO offered intellectual property licenses to
Linux end-users. The purported purpose of these licenses is to allow UNIX vendors to use
SCO's UNIX intellectual property and to compensate SCO for the UNIX intellectual property
that it claims is found in Linux. In May 2003, SCO sent 1500 end-user corporations a letter
threatening suit based on SCO's assertion that it owned the UNIX copyright and that Linux
infringes on its UNIX intellectual property. Decl. Mark James Ex. 42. Novell and IBM were
among the recipients of this letter.
SCO generated participation in and revenues from its licensing program. Decl. Mark
James Exs. 80, 81. Despite success with some licensees, however, SCO's campaign generated
29
controversy that impacted its core software business. Internal SCO documents demonstrate that
SCO's sales force was having difficulties selling the SCOsource licenses for a variety of reasons.
F. Public Statements
On March 6, 2003, SCO filed suit against IBM alleging, among other things, that IBM
had violated its UNIX Software and Sublicensing Agreements by disclosing UNIX-derivative
source code. A few months later, while the public was reacting to SCO's claim that the use of
Linux required a UNIX license, Novell went public with a statement of its belief that it had not
transferred the UNIX copyrights to SCO. On May 28, 2003, Novell's Chairman, President, and
CEO Jack Messman announced publicly that Novell did not transfer the UNIX and UnixWare
copyrights to SCO, and that SCO was not the owner of the copyrights. Decl. Mark James Ex. 36.
SCO and Novell continued the ownership dispute in a series of public statements over the
next several months. On June 6, 2003, Novell issued a press release stating that SCO had sent
Amendment No. to Novell the night before, that Novell was not aware of having the amendment
in its files, and that the amendment "appears to support SCO's claim that ownership of certain
copyrights for UNIX did transfer to SCO in 1996." Id. Ex. 38.
On June 26, 2003, Novell notified SCO that "[u]pon closer scrutiny . . . Amendment No.
2 raises as many questions about copyright transfers as it answers. Indeed, what is most certainly
not the case is that `any question about whether UNIX copyrights were transferred to SCO as part
of the Asset Purchase Agreement was clarified in Amendment No. 2' (as stated in its June 6 press
release)." Id. Ex. 43.
In June or July 2003, SCO registered certain copyrights in UNIX System V and
UnixWare with the United States Copyright Office. In September and October 2003, Novell
30
submitted certifications to the United States Copyright Office claiming to be the owner of the
same UNIX System V and UnixWare copyrights.
Because SCO alleges in its Complaint that it owns the copyrights to UNIX and
UnixWare, it claims "Novell's wrongful claims of copyrights and ownership in UNIX and
UnixWare have caused, and continue to cause, irreparable harm to SCO." In response to
discovery, SCO maintained that Novell's statements impeded its ability to make sales in its
SCOsource business. Christopher Sontag Dep. at 117. SCO identifies approximately a dozen
prospective customers who mentioned the cloud over SCO's title to UNIX copyrights as one of
its reasons not to purchase a SCOsource license. Decl. Mark James Exs. 49, 57, 58, 62, 79, 88.
Several customers also stated that their reasons for not entering into a SCOsource license was
due to their skepticism as to the necessity of obtaining a Unix license to operate Linux.
G. SVRX Licenses
Apart from the dispute with respect to copyright ownership, the parties have had ongoing
disagreements as to their respective roles concerning SVRX licenses and royalties. A significant
part of the consideration for the APA came from Novell's receipt of future SVRX Royalties and
royalties from the transfer of and future sales of UnixWare products. APA § 1.2(b).
Under the APA, Novell and SCO agreed to an arrangement whereby Novell would
continue to receive one hundred percent of the SVRX Royalties. Id. Santa Cruz was to collect
and pass through these royalties to Novell, and Novell, in turn, would pay Santa Cruz an
administrative fee of five percent of the SVRX Royalties. Novell retained "all rights to the
SVRX Royalties notwithstanding the transfer of the SVRX Licenses to [Santa Cruz]." Id. Santa
31
Cruz "only has legal title and not equitable interest in such royalties within the meaning of
Section 541(d) of the Bankruptcy Code." Id.
Section 1.2(b) states that SVRX Royalties are "defined and described in Section 4.16."
Under Section 4.16(a), Santa Cruz was to "administer the collection of all royalties, fees and
other amounts due under all SVRX Licenses (as listed in detail under Item VI of Schedule 1.1(a)
hereof and referred to herein as "SVRX Royalties")." Id. § 4.16(a). Item VI of Schedule 1.1(a),
in turn, states, "All contracts relating to SVRX Licenses listed below." Instead of providing a list
of license agreements with various other parties, however, the Schedule then provides a list of
UNIX System V software releases, including UNIX System V Release Nos. 2.0, 2.1, 3.0, 3.1,
3.2, 4.0, 4.1, and 4.2, and "[a]ll prior UNIX System releases and versions preceding UNIX
System V Release No 2.0." Id. Sched. 1.1(a)(VI).
Schedule 1.1(b) to the APA, the Excluded Assets schedule, specifically memorializes that
the APA did not transfer any rights to the SVRX Royalties to Santa Cruz. Listed as an excluded
asset in Schedule 1.1(b) is "[a]ll right, title and interest to the SVRX Royalties, less the 5% fee
for administering the collection thereof pursuant to Section 4.16." Id. Sched.. 1.1(b)(VIII).
Section 4.16(b) of the APA also contains a significant provision regarding the parties'
authority with respect to SVRX Licenses. This section provides that Santa Cruz "shall not, and
shall not have the authority to, amend, modify, or waive any right under or assign any SVRX
License without the prior written consent of [Novell]." APA § 4.16(b). Under this section,
Novell retained the sole discretion to direct Santa Cruz to amend, supplement, modify, waive, or
assign any rights under or to any SVRX Licenses. Id. Novell was also granted authority to take
any action on Santa Cruz's behalf that Santa Cruz may fail to take concerning the SVRX
32
Licenses. Id. Furthermore, Santa Cruz acknowledged that it had no right to "enter into future
licenses or amendments of the SVRX Licenses, except as may be incidently involved through its
rights to sell and license the Assets or the Merged Product . . . or future versions thereof of the
Merged Product." Id.
With respect to UnixWare royalties, Section 1.2(b) of the APA states: "In addition, [Santa
Cruz] agrees to make payment to [Novell] of additional royalties retained by [Novell] in respect
of the transfer of UnixWare and on account of [Santa Cruz]'s future sale of UnixWare products."
Id. § 1.2(b). The parties agreed that "[t]he amounts and timing of additional royalties to be paid
in connection with [Santa Cruz]'s sale of the UnixWare products are identified in detail on
Schedule 1.2(b) hereto." Id. Schedule 1.2(b) identifies the "Royalty Bearing Products" for
which Santa Cruz was to pay royalties on and provides a structure for the payment of the
royalties. Id. Sched. 1.2(b). Schedule 1.2(b) also states that the royalty obligation set forth in
this schedule would terminate after Novell received payments equal to $84 million or December
31, 2002, whichever is sooner. Id. Sched. 1.2(b)(c). Schedule 1.2(b)(f) also recognized that
Santa Cruz had the right to convert existing SVRX-based customers to a UnixWare derived
product. Id. Sched. 1.2(b)(f). The Schedule then sets forth a process for determining if a
customer is validly converted from SVRX to UnixWare. Id.
(a) Amendments Relating to SVRX Licenses
Amendment No. 1 to the APA further obligated Santa Cruz to give Novell: (1) an
estimate of the total SVRX Royalties amount within six days following the calendar month when
the royalties are received; and (2) a "report detailing all such royalties" within one calendar
month following each calendar month in which SVRX Royalties are received by Novell. Decl.
33
Mark James Ex. 2 ("Am. No. 1") ¶ E(f). "Such monthly reports shall be separately broken down
by revenue type (i.e. source code right to use fees, gross and net binary per copy fees, and support
fees), by product, by customer, by quarterly period by which distribution occurs, and by country .
. . of distribution." Id.
Amendment No. 1 expands SVRX licenses to include those contracts relating to certain
"Auxiliary Products" expressly identified in Attachment A to that Amendment. Id. ¶ K.4(i). The
first line of Schedule 1.1(a)(VI) was amended to read "All contracts relating to the SVRX
Licenses and Auxiliary Product Licenses (collectively "SVRX Licenses") listed below." Id.
Amendment No. 1 also modifies Section 4.16(b) to create two limited exceptions where
Santa Cruz has "the right to enter into amendments of the SVRX Licenses." Id. ¶ J. Santa Cruz
could enter into amendments of SVRX Licenses (1) as may be incidentally involved through its
rights to sell and license UnixWare software or the Merged Product or (2) to allow a licensee
under a particular SVRX License to use the source code of the relevant SVRX products on
additional CPUs or to receive additional distribution from Santa Cruz of such source code. Id.
Amendment No. 1 further amended the APA to permit Santa Cruz to retain 100% of four
"categories of SVRX Royalties": (1) fees attributable to stand-alone contracts for maintenance
and support of SVRX products listed under Item VI of Schedule 1.1(a) of the APA; (2) source
code right to use fees under existing SVRX Licenses from the licensing of additional CPU's and
from the distribution by Buyer of additional source code copies; (3) source code right to use fees
attributable to new SVRX licenses approved by Novell pursuant to Section 4.16(b); and (4)
royalties attributable to the distribution by Santa Cruz and its distributors of binary copies of
SVRX products, to the extent such copies are made by or for Santa Cruz pursuant to Santa
34
Cruz's own licenses from Novell acquired before the APA through previous agreements. Id. ¶
E.(e).
Approximately one year later, Amendment No. 2 to the APA also made amendments to
Section 4.16 of the APA. Decl. Mark James Ex. 5 (Am. No. 2"). Amendment No. 2 was entered
the same day as the parties agreed to a buy-out agreement with IBM with respect to SVRX
Licenses. Under Section B of Amendment No. 2, Novell and Santa Cruz agreed to a procedure
that would govern "any potential transaction with an SVRX licensee which concerns a buy-out of
any such licensee's royalty obligations." Am. No. 2 at ¶ B(1)-(5). The parties agreed to provide
written notification to each other upon becoming aware of any potential buy-out transaction, to
both attend any meetings or negotiations with the licensee unless agreed otherwise, to jointly
consent to any written proposals to be presented to licensees prior to its delivery to the licensee,
and to meet to discuss any potential buy-out transaction. Id. The parties further agreed that a
buy-out transaction should not occur without the prior written consent of both parties. Id.
As part of this section regarding the newly-agreed process for managing buy-out
transactions, Amendment No. 2 provides that "[t]his Agreement does not give Novell the right to
increase any SVRX licensee's rights to SVRX source code, nor does it give Novell the right to
grant new SVRX source code licenses. In addition, Novell may not prevent SCO from
exercising its rights with respect to SVRX source code in accordance with the Agreement." Id. ¶
B(5).
(b) SVRX Buyout Agreements with IBM and Sequent
Between 1985 and 1996, IBM entered into various agreements, supplements, and
amendments concerning its rights to use UNIX System V software products. Decl. Kenneth
35
Brakebill Ex. 5-12. On February 1, 1985, IBM and AT&T entered into a software agreement,
sublicensing agreement, substitution agreement, and side letter. Id. Ex. 5-8. Between April 21,
1986 and January 25, 1989, IBM and AT&T executed numerous supplements to the agreements
entered in 1985. Id. Ex. 9-12. These supplements granted IBM additional rights to UNIX SVRX
releases listed in Item VI of Schedule 1.1(a) of the APA. Id.
Novell became the successor-in-interest to AT&T's rights under these agreements when it
purchased UNIX Systems Laboratories in 1993. AT&T and its subsidiaries, and then Novell,
used a combination of agreements in licensing its SVRX technology, including software
agreements, sublicensing agreements, and product supplements. See id. Ex. 5, 6. The software
and sublicensing agreements set forth rights and obligations for the use and distribution of the
technology. While each agreement had a given purpose, the agreements referred to and
incorporated each other. For example, the IBM and Sequent Software Agreements provide that
"additional supplements may be added to this Agreement . . . . Each such additional Supplement
shall be considered part of this Agreement." Id. Ex. 5, 15. Furthermore, the Software
Agreement provides that "[t]his Agreement and its Supplements set forth the entire agreement
and understanding between the parties as to the subject matter hereof." Id. The IBM and
Sequent Sublicensing Agreements provide that "[t]his Sublicensing Agreement, together with the
Software Agreement and its Supplement(s), set forth the entire agreement and understanding
between the parties as to the subject matter hereof." Id. Ex. 6, 17.
On October 17, 1996, IBM entered into Amendment No. X, which was executed by
Novell and Santa Cruz on October 16, 1996. Id. Ex.13. Amendment X modified the terms of
IBM's previous agreements and supplements thereto, referring to them collectively as Related
36
Agreements. Amendment X granted IBM additional source code rights and an "irrevocable, fully
paid-up, perpetual right to exercise all of its rights under the Related Agreements beginning
January 1, 1996 at no additional royalty fee."3Id. at § 1. The irrevocable nature of these rights,
however, are not to "be construed to limit Novell's or SCO's rights to enjoin or otherwise
prohibit IBM from violating any and all of Novell's or SCO's rights under this Amendment No.
X, the Related Agreements, or under general patent, copyright, or trademark law." Id.
In Amendment No. X, the parties explicitly recognized that although SCO had purchased
the Related Agreements, Novell "retained certain rights with respect to" that set of agreements.
Id. Recitals. As consideration for the rights granted by Amendment No. X, IBM paid Santa Cruz
$10,125,000 in two installmentsone payment of $4,860,000, and a second payment of
$5,265,000. Id. § 4. In November 1996 and January 1997, when Santa Cruz received these
payments, it treated 100% of the money as SVRX Royalties payable to Novell, subject to the 5%
administrative fee that Santa Cruz would pay itself. Id. Ex. 14 at 1; 43 at 1, 3.
Novell and Santa Cruz separately executed a General Release Agreement on October 16,
1996, which settled all disputes between the parties concerning IBM's buyout of royalty
obligations.
Between April 18, 1985 and November 9, 1989, AT&T also entered into various
agreements for licensing rights to UNIX System V software products with Sequent. In particular,
on April 18, 1985, AT&T entered into a Software Agreement giving Sequent the right to, among
other things, use, modify, and prepare derivative works of an SVRX product identified in Item VI
37
of Schedule 1.1(a) to the APA. Id. Ex. 15, 16. On January 28, 1986, AT&T and Sequent entered
into a Sublicensing Agreement that gave Sequent the right to sublicense the software products
designated in the 1985 agreement. Id. Ex. 17. Between 1986 and 1989, Sequent and AT&T
executed several supplements to the previous agreements. Id. Ex. 18-22.
Novell became the successor-in-interest to AT&T's rights under the Sequent agreements
in 1993. Santa Cruz administered collection of revenue to be passed on to Novell from these
agreements with Sequent. For example, in January of 1997, Santa Cruz passed along revenue to
Novell in the amount of $6,560.49, and noted a five percent administrative fee. Id. Ex. 43 at 3.
In July of 1999, IBM purchased Sequent in a stock transaction and assumed its rights and
obligations under the Sequent agreements.
(c) Termination of IBM SVRX License
In March of 2003, as part of SCO's SCOsource campaign, SCO sent a letter to IBM
notifying it that it would terminate IBM's license to SVRX technology as of June 13, 2003, if
IBM did not remedy certain alleged breaches of that license. Decl. Kenneth Brakebill Ex. 25.
On June 9, 2003, Novell wrote to SCO explaining that Section 4.16(b) of the APA gave Novell
the right to require SCO to waive any rights under any SVRX License and authorized Novell to
take such action on behalf of SCO should SCO fail to so act. Id. Ex. 27.
On June 11, 2003, SCO responded to Novell, refusing to take the action requested by
Novell but making reference to the IBM agreements as "IBM's SVRX Licenses." Id. Ex. 28. On
June 12, 2003, Novell sent SCO a letter explaining the legal basis for Novell's waiver, including
Novell's right to take action at its sole discretion. Id. Ex. 30. When SCO failed to take the
action demanded by Novell, Novell sent another letter to SCO that waived "any purported right
38
SCO may claim to terminate IBM's SVRX Licenses enumerated in Amendment No. X or to
revoke any rights thereunder." Id. Ex. 31. Notwithstanding Novell's directive, SCO publicly
announced on June 16, 2003, that it had terminated IBM's Software and Sublicensing
Agreements as of June 13, 2003. Id. Ex. 32.
On October 7, 2003, in response to public positions being taken by SCO concerning code
developed by IBM, Novell again sent SCO a letter notifying it of Novell's Section 4.16(b)
authority and directing SCO to waive any purported right it may claim. Id. Ex. 33. SCO
responded stating that "[y]our analysis of the obligations that IBM . . . owe[s] to SCO pursuant to
the relevant Software Agreements is incorrect. However, we need not debate the incorrectness of
your views, particularly Novell's purported ability to waive any and all licensees' obligations
under the Software Agreements, because, as you are well aware, we are currently litigating these
issues with IBM." Id. Ex. 34.
The next day, Novell again wrote to SCO stating that because SCO had failed to take the
action directed by Novell, Novell was waiving any claim SCO was making to require IBM to
treat IBM code as subject to the confidentiality obligations or use restrictions of the IBM
agreements. Id. Ex. 35. SCO responded that Novell was without authority to make such a
waiver and thus it had no force and effect. Id. Ex. 36.
At no point during the written correspondence between SCO and Novell in 2003 did SCO
argue that the IBM agreements were not SVRX Licenses under the APA or that the SVRX
licenses are limited to binary licenses or binary royalty streams. SCO did not state the reasoning
behind its actions or inactions.
39
(d) Termination of Sequent License
On May 29, 2003, SCO sent a letter to Sequent notifying it that SCO intended to
terminate the Sequent agreements relating to SVRX technology as of September 2, 2003, for,
among other things, allegedly violating the source code restrictions on Sequent's Dynix software
product which SCO said was subject to Sequent's System V Release 4.0 License. Decl. Kenneth
Brakebill Ex. 26. On August 11, 2003, SCO sent another letter to Sequent purporting to
terminate the Sequent License, retroactively as of July 30, 2003. Id. Ex. 37.
On August 14, 2003, IBM, acting on behalf of Sequent, responded to SCO's termination
notice by stating that it did not believe it had breached the Sequent License and requesting more
information on the alleged breach. Id. Ex. 38. IBM also rejected SCO's claim that it had any
right to terminate the Sequent License. On February 6, 2004, Novell sent a letter to SCO
outlining the lack of support for SCO's position and directing SCO to waive any purported right
it may claim to require Sequent to treat Sequent Code as subject to the confidentiality obligations
or use restrictions of Sequent's System V Release 4.0 License. Id. Ex. 38. SCO refused to waive
its purported rights, and Novell purported to waive them on SCO's behalf. Id. Ex. 39-41.
(e) Sun and Microsoft Agreements
Another dispute between the parties relating to the SVRX royalty and license provisions
of the APA focuses on SCO's execution of agreements with Sun Microsystems ("Sun") and
Microsoft in 2003. On February 25, 2003, SCO executed an agreement with Sun in which Sun
paid SCO approximately $10 million for the right to use, reproduce, prepare derivative works,
market, disclose, make, and sell certain UNIX technology, including source and object (binary)
code. Decl. Michael Jacobs, Ex. 9 ("2003 Sun Agreement"). The 2003 Sun Agreement purports
40
"to amend and restate" a Software License and Distribution Agreement, signed March 17, 1994,
between Sun and Novell. Id. Recitals. In the 1994 Sun Agreement, Sun obtained a license that
included certain UNIX System V technology. The 2003 Sun Agreement re-licenses the SVRX
technology licensed in the 1994 Sun Agreement and licenses additional SVRX technology to
Sun. Id. Ex. 10.
SCO also executed an agreement with Microsoft on April 30, 2003, and several
amendments to that agreement over the following three months. Id. Ex. 11, 12 ("2003 Microsfot
Agreement"). Microsoft paid SCO $16,750,000 for the license rights, a liability release, and for
options to purchase additional licenses. Id. §§ 1, 3.5, 4.1. Under the Agreement, Microsoft
received various rights to UNIX System V technology. SCO agreed to deliver to Microsoft this
UNIX System V software in both binary and source form, which includes the same versions of
Unix System V software that are expressly referenced as SVRX Licenses in the APA.
SCO did not contact Novell for approval before executing the 2003 Sun Agreement or the
2003 Microsoft Agreement. And Novell did not authorize either agreement. The agreements
gave SCO its first profitable year in history. Id. Ex. 7 at 9. SCO never remitted to Novell any
monies it received from either of the agreements. Decl. Joseph LaSala at ¶ 4.
On July 11, 2003, when Novell had not received any royalty reports from SCO for over
half a year, it sent SCO a letter demanding royalty reports and payments as required by the APA.
Id. ¶ 6, Ex. 1. In response, on July 17, 2003, SCO submitted limited royalty payments from
November 2002 through May 31, 2003. Id. Ex. 2. These payments did not mention any royalties
from the 2003 Sun or Microsoft Agreements. Id. ¶ 6.
41
Novell conducted an audit of SCO's compliance with the APA's agency provisions at the
end of 2003. On November 21, 2003, Novell demanded copies of the Sun and Microsoft
Agreements. Decl. Michael Jacobs Ex. 13 at 2. SCO did not respond. On December 29, 2003,
Novell again contacted SCO requesting copies of the agreements. Id. Ex. 14. On January 7,
2004, SCO replied that it anticipated being in a position to respond in the near future. Id. Ex. 15.
Novell sent subsequent inquiries in February, March, April, and November of 2004. SCO did
not produce the agreements. Id. Ex. 16-19.
On February 7, 2006, Novell finally received the Sun and Microsoft Agreements from
SCO in a production of documents pursuant to a discovery request in this litigation. SCO has
had financial problems, posting operational losses for all years except 2003 when it entered into
the Sun and Microsoft Agreements. Decl. Michael Jacobs Ex. 7, 21, 22. Because of the decrease
in SCO's revenues and assets, Novell fears that it will be unable to collect on its claim for
royalties.
DISCUSSION
I. Cross Motions on Copyright Ownership
The cross motions on the copyright ownership issue include: (1) SCO's motion for
complete summary judgment on Novell's First Claim for slander of title on the basis that SCO
purportedly owns the copyrights at issue; (2) SCO's motion for partial summary judgment on its
slander of title claim, breach of contract claim, and unfair competition claim on the issue of
whether SCO owns the UNIX and UnixWare copyrights; and (3) Novell's motion for summary
judgment on SCO's slander of title and specific performance claims asserting that the plain
language of the relevant contracts demonstrates that Novell owns the copyrights at issue.
42
As in all contract disputes, the court must begin its analysis of whether the UNIX and
UnixWare copyrights were transferred to SCO with the language of the contract.4Both parties
argue that the plain language of the APA supports their respective positions.
The APA's provision entitled "Purchase and Sale of Assets" provides:
On the terms and subject to the conditions set forth in this
Agreement, Seller will sell, convey, transfer, assign and deliver to
Buyer and Buyer will purchase and acquire from Seller on the
Closing Date (as defined in Section 1.7) all of Seller's right, title,
and interest in and to the assets and properties of Seller relating to
the Business (collectively the "Assets") identified on Schedule
1.1(a) hereto. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Assets to be so
purchased shall not include those assets (the "Excluded Assets")
set forth on Schedule 1.1(b).
APA § 1.1(a).
SCO asserts that the APA provided for the transfer of the copyrights where it provided for
the transfer of all of Novell's "right, title, and interest in and to" the Assets on Schedule 1.1(a),
and Schedule 1.1(a), in turn, identifies "all rights and ownership of UNIX and UnixWare,
including but not limited to all versions of UNIX and UnixWare and all copies of UNIX and
UnixWare." Id. APA § 1.1(a), Sched. 1.1(a).
SCO's analysis of the transfer of copyrights, however, completely ignores the Excluded
Assets on Schedule 1.1(b). Section 1.1(a) specifically states that the "Assets to be so purchased
shall not include those assets (the "Excluded Assets) set forth on Schedule 1.1(b). Because
Section 1.1(a) of the APA transfers the Assets on Schedule 1.1(a) and excludes the assets on
Schedule 1.1(b), the proper course of analysis is to examine both schedules.
43
Not surprisingly in the transfer of a software business, the schedules both contain sections
on intellectual property. With respect to their "Intellectual Property" provisions, Schedule 1.1(a)
and Schedule 1.1(b) are consistent. Schedule 1.1(b) excludes from transfer "[a]ll copyrights and
trademarks, except for the trademarks UNIX and UnixWare" and "[a]ll Patents." Id. APA
Sched. 1.1(b) § V.A, V.B. Schedule 1.1(a) transfers only "[t]rademarks UNIX and UnixWare as
and to the extent held by Seller (excluding any compensation Seller receives with respect of the
license granted to X/Open regarding the UNIX trademark)." Id. APA Sched. 1.1(a) § V.
SCO claims that it is improper to rely on the Intellectual Property provision of the
Excluded Asset Schedule in the original APA, because Amendment No. 2 revised that provision
to read "All copyrights and trademarks, except for the copyrights and trademarks owned by
Novell as of the date of the Agreement required for SCO to exercise its rights with respect to the
acquisition of UNIX and UnixWare technologies." APA Amend. No. 2 (emphasis added to
demonstrate amendment). Throughout this litigation, SCO has vacillated between arguing that
the transfer of copyrights was effectuated by the APA and contending that the transfer was
effectuated instead by Amendment No. 2. It now argues that the court must look only to the
APA as amended by Amendment No. 2. Novell, however, contends that the court must analyze
whether the APA as amended when the transaction closed transferred the copyrights and also
whether Amendment No. 2, which was entered a year later, effectuated a transfer of the
copyrights retroactively or at that time.
Novell takes issue with SCO's argument that the "all copyrights" exclusion in Schedule
1.1(b) of the APA no longer exists for purposes of construing the APA because the exclusion
was subsequently modified by Amendment No. 2. Amendment No. 2, executed a year after the
44
APA, states that it amends the APA as of October 16, 1996, not the date of the original APA or
the Closing date of the original APA. The APA does not constitute an instrument of conveyance
because it merely describes the assets that Novell "will" sell in the future. The instrument of
conveyance for the APA was the Bill of Sale that the parties signed on the date the APA closed.
When the parties executed Amendment No. 2 a year later, it was not made retroactive, did not
amend the previous Bill of Sale, did not refer to a new Bill of Sale, and did not itself contain any
language of conveyance to transfer any copyrights. Novell contends that there is no basis for
concluding that the Bill of Sale, executed on December 6, 1995, could have transferred any assets
contained in an amendment executed ten months later without some language in the amendment
allowing that to occur.
SCO cites to Nish Noroian Farms v. Agricultural Labor Relations Board, for the
proposition that "[a] written instrument must be construed as a whole, and multiple writings must
be considered together when part of the same contract." 35 Cal. 3d 726, 735 (Cal. 1984). In
Nish Noroian, the court concluded that a waiver provision in an earlier settlement had to be
examined in light of the formal agreement entered later which incorporated and superseded it.
Id. The court referred to Sections 1641 and 1642 of the California Civil Code, which also
provide basic contractual interpretation rules. Rule 1641 states that a contract is to be interpreted
to give effect to every provision of the contract, when practicable. Cal. Civ. Code § 1641. And
Rule 1642 states that contracts relating to the same matters, between the same parties, and made
as parts of substantially one transaction, are to be taken together. Id. § 1642.
These legal principles, however, do not suggest that the court should analyze the transfer
of copyright issue without giving any consideration to the text of the original APA. Rather, the
45
court must consider the original APA, the agreement executed in connection with the APA's
closing, Amendment No. 2, and Amendment No. 2's relationship to the original APA and the
agreements executed in connection with its closing. The court concludes that the proper way to
analyze the issue, therefore, is to look at the Agreements in turn in the same chronological order
that the parties entered the agreements. See Universal Sales Corp. v. Cal. Press Mfg. Co., 128
P.2d 665, 671-72 (Cal. 1942) (suggesting that the court place itself in the same situation in which
the parties found themselves at the time of contracting).
A. Did Copyrights Transfer Under the APA and Contemporaneous Agreements?
SCO's plain language argument relies on cases holding that "[i]n a non-consumer setting
such as this, a transfer of all right, title and interest to computer programs and software can only
mean the transfer of the copyrights as well as the actual computer program or disks." Shugrue v.
Continental Airlines Inc., 977 F. Supp. 280, 285-86 (S.D.N.Y. 1997); see also Relational Design
& Tech., Inc. v. Brock, 1993 WL 191323, at *6 (D. Kan. May 25, 1993); Schiller & Schmidt, Inc.
v. NordiscoCorp., 969 F.2d 410, 413 (7th Cir. 1992). These cases, however, do not support
SCO's contention. Each of these cases recognized that the terms "all right, title, and interest"
transferred copyrights when there was no other language addressing copyrights.
In Shugrue, the court found a transfer of the copyrights based on the language "all right,
title, and interest" because "[n]o exception was carved out for copyrights" and "no rights, titles,
or interests were retained." 977 F. Supp. at 285. Similarly, in Schiller & Schmidt, the court
noted that "the agreement does not mention the word 'copyright.'" 969 F.2d at 413.
Furthermore, the Relational Design case, cited by SCO, does not actually support SCO's
position. The court concluded that where a contract stated that a party would own "all rights to
46
the completed program with no licensing or royalties fees due," the contract transferred only
ownership in a material objectthe source codenot the copyright embodied in the object. 1993
WL 191323, at *6 ("Ownership of a copyright, or of any exclusive rights under a copyright, is
distinct from ownership of any material object in which the work is embodied.").
In any event, because there is specific language in the APA regarding the inclusion and
exclusion of copyrights, the cases SCO relies upon are factually distinguishable from this case.
Even if this court were to accept SCO's contention that Schedule 1.1(b) of the original APA
should not be considered because it was later amended, Schedule 1.1(a) of the original APA
specifically addresses intellectual property and includes only trademarks. It is unlikely that any
of the cases SCO relies upon would have agreed that a transfer of other intellectual property
rights, such as copyrights and patents, occurred when only trademarks are identified under the
heading of "Intellectual Property." In interpreting the plain language of the APA in this case,
Schedule 1.1(a), itself, represents a limitation of the intellectual property the parties intended to
transfer.
SCO's plain language arguments also focus on Recitals A and B and Section 1.3(a)(i) of
the APA. SCO claims that these provisions demonstrate the parties' intent that "all of the
Business" be transferred to Santa Cruz and, therefore, that the APA transferred copyrights.
Recital A defines Novell's UNIX and UnixWare "Business" to include the development of a line
of software, the sale of binary and source code licenses to the various versions of UNIX and
UnixWare, the support of such products, and the sale of other products which are directly related
to UNIX and UnixWare. Recital B defines the "Acquisition" contemplated by the parties to
mean that Santa Cruz would "acquire certain of the assets of, and assume certain of the liabilities
47
of [Novell] comprising the Business." Section 1.3(a)(i), which provides the intent of the parties
with respect to the transfer of customers, states that "[i]t is the intent of the parties hereto that all
of the Business . . . be transferred to Buyer."
These general provisions provide little insight into whether the parties intended to transfer
the UNIX and UnixWare copyrights to Santa Cruz. The Business is not defined specifically
enough to include copyrights. And the definition of the Acquisition of the Business merely states
that Santa Cruz would acquire certain of the assets comprising the Business. Where there are
specific provisions of the document detailing the assets being transferred and the assets being
excluded, such as Schedules 1.1(a) and 1.1(b), the more specific provisions control. National
Ins. Underwriters v. Maurice Carter, 17 Cal. 3d 380, 386 (1976) ("[W]hen a general and
particular provision are inconsistent, the latter is paramount to the former."). Schedule 1.1(a)
provides that the only intellectual property Santa Cruz was acquiring were the UNIX and
UnixWare trademarks. Moreover, there is nothing inconsistent with the provisions cited by SCO
and the more specific schedules provided for in the APA. Recital B specifically defines the
Acquisition as certain assets comprising the Business.
SCO further argues that the agreements executed by the parties in connection with the
Closing of the APA support its position that copyrights transferred under the APA. "It is a
general rule that several papers relating to the same subject matter and executed as parts of
substantially one transaction, are to be construed together as one contract." Harm v. Frasher,
181 Cal. App. 2d 405, 412-13 (Ct. App. 1960). On the Closing Date, Novell and Santa Cruz
executed the Bill of Sale which provides that it "does hereby transfer, convey, sell, assign, and
deliver to Buyer . . . all of the Assets" in accordance with Section 1.1(a) of the APA. SCO
48
asserts that the Bill of Sale expressly effectuated the transfer of all assets identified in Section
1.1(a) of the APA, which included "all rights and ownership" of UNIX and UnixWare. Again,
however, SCO fails to recognize that the term "Assets" in the APA is a defined term that does
not include any of the assets on the Excluded Assets schedule. Moreover, the Bill of Sale
specifically states that the defined terms have the meanings given in the APA and that the
provisions of the APA control. Therefore, the Bill of Sale did not grant additional rights to any
party, does not create an ambiguity with respect to any term in the APA, and did not effectuate a
transfer of assets that was not provided for in the APA.
In addition, SCO contends that the TLA confirms that Novell transferred the copyrights to
Santa Cruz on the Closing Date because Section 1.6 of the APA expressly provided for a license
back to Novell of the technology transferred to Santa Cruz. Under the TLA, Santa Cruz granted
a license to Novell with certain restrictions and specified that SCO owned the "Licensed
Technology." SCO contends that Section 1.6 and the TLA would be senseless had Novell
retained the ownership of the copyrights because Novell would not have needed a license to the
Licensed Technology.
SCO, however, does not recognize that the TLA provided that the term Licensed
Technology had the meaning given to it in the APA. The APA defines "Licensed Technology"
as "all of the technology included in the Assets and all derivatives of the technology included in
the Assets." The term Assets is defined in the APA as those assets included on Schedule 1.1(a)
but not those assets excluded from transfer on Schedule 1.1(b). Novell would need a license to
be able to use these other aspects of the technology sold to Santa Cruz and derivatives of the
transferred assets. Because the "Licensed Technology" included rights distinct from Novell's
49
UNIX and UnixWare copyrights, it makes sense that Novell would need a license back with
respect to those assets. Furthermore, the same logic would imply that Novell transferred
ownership of UNIX-related patents because Novell would not have needed a license to these
patents if it retained ownership. SCO's admission that Novell did not transfer ownership of the
patents refutes SCO's argument that the TLA implies that Novell must have transferred
ownership of all UNIX-related technology to Santa Cruz. The plain language of the APA,
therefore, is in harmony with the plain language of the TLA.
Furthermore, SCO's attempt to rewrite "all copyrights" in Schedule 1.1(b) to mean
"NetWare Copyrights Only" is contrary to the plain language of the Schedule 1.1(a) and
Schedule 1.1(b). Schedule 1.1(b) clearly distinguished UNIX and UnixWare trademarks as
assets being transferred. Schedule 1.1(a) also clearly transferred only UNIX and UnixWare
trademarks. If the parties intended to transfer UNIX and UnixWare copyrights as well, they
could have easily demonstrated that intent while they were making the distinction for UNIX and
UnixWare trademarks. There is nothing in the text of the APA that would support an
interpretation of "all copyrights" to mean only Netware copyrights.
In Blumenfeld v. R. H. Macy & Co., 92 Cal. App. 3d 38 (1979), the California Court of
Appeals rejected a similar attempt to interpret "all" to mean "less than all." The trial court relied
on extrinsic evidence to interpret a contract assigning "all claims against third parties relating to
the [shopping] Center" as limited to claims against current tenants of the Center. The court of
appeals reversed, holding that the "all-inclusive language of the agreement is not reasonably
susceptible of the meaning advanced." Id. at 46.
The language of Schedule 1.1(b) is not reasonably susceptible to being interpreted to
50
mean "all copyrights except for UNIX and UnixWare copyrights." The parties clearly delineated
that the UNIX and UnixWare trademarks were exceptions and they clearly chose not to make a
similar exception for the copyrights. There is also no basis for reading the language to mean that
the only copyrights excluded were NetWare copyrights. If the parties had intended to exclude
only NetWare copyrights, it would have been simple to use "NetWare copyrights" instead of "all
copyrights. However, the parties used "all copyrights." The exclusion of "all copyrights" was all
inclusive. Interestingly, SCO does not argue that Schedule 1.1(b)'s exclusion of "all patents"
means "only Netware patents." The use of "all patents" after "all copyrights" clearly shows that
"all copyrights" cannot be interpreted to mean "only Netware copyrights" while "all patents"
means "all patents."
The court concludes that the APA as amended by Amendment No. 1 excluded UNIX and
UnixWare copyrights from the Assets transferred to Santa Cruz by the Bill of Sale. The Bill of
Sale executed by the parties on December 6, 1995, transferred ownership to Santa Cruz of the
Assets as defined by the APA and Amendment No. 1. Thus, the scope of the Assets transferred
by the Bill of Sale is determined by the definition of Assets set forth in the APA and Amendment
No. 1. Amendment No. 1 made some revisions to Schedules 1.1(a) and (b) but did not change
the description of the Intellectual Property included and excluded from the transfer. A review of
Schedule 1.1(a) listing transferred assets and Schedule 1.1(b) listing Excluded Assets
demonstrates that the transferred assets did not include the UNIX and UnixWare copyrights. The
only "Intellectual Property" listed in the Schedule 1.1(a) list of assets to be transferred are the
UNIX and UnixWare trademarks. Schedule 1.1(a) did not identify UNIX or UnixWare
copyrights as an asset to be transferred. Conversely, the Schedule 1.1(b) list of "Excluded
51
Assets" expressly excluded from the transferred assets "[a]ll copyrights and trademarks, except
for the trademarks UNIX and UnixWare." Thus, the language of the APA and Amendment No.
1 at the time of the Bill of Sale is clear: all copyrights were excluded from the transfer.
Apart from the language of the agreements, SCO maintains that it has provided the court
with extrinsic evidence that the parties intended the APA to transfer the UNIX and UnixWare
copyrights to Santa Cruz. Under California law, extrinsic evidence is admissible both to support
interpretations of contracts to which the language at issue is reasonably susceptible and to
demonstrate the parties' intent under contractual provisions that the court deems to be
ambiguous. Universal Sales Corp. v. Call Press Mfg. Co., 128 P.2d 665, 671-72 (Cal. 1942).
Therefore, oral testimony and other extrinsic evidence are not admissible to support an
interpretation of a contract that is contrary to the plain language. The critical issue is "whether
the offered evidence is relevant to prove a meaning which the language of the instrument is
reasonably susceptible." Dore v. Arnold Worldwide, Inc., 39 Cal. 4th 384, 391 (2006). If the
contract is not reasonably susceptible to the proposed interpretation, extrinsic evidence is
inadmissible and does not create a triable issue of fact that would defeat summary judgment. Id.
at 388, 391-93.
When a contract is integrated, "extrinsic evidence is admissible only to supplement or
explain the terms of the agreement--and even then, only where such evidence is consistent with
the terms of the integrated document." EPA Real Estate Partnership v. Kang, 12 Cal. App. 4th
171, 175-77 (1992). The APA includes an express integration clause stating that the
"Agreement, and the Schedules and Exhibits" "constitute the entire agreement among the parties
with respect to the subject matter . . . and supersede all prior agreements and understanding, both
52
written and oral." APA § 9.5. Novell and Santa Cruz further agreed, in connection with the Bill
of Sale, that the APA is an integrated agreement not to be altered by any other understandings:
"It is acknowledged and agreed . . . that the Agreement is the exclusive source of the agreement
and understanding between the Seller and Buyer respecting the Assets." Bill of Sale ¶ 5.
The parol evidence rule precludes SCO from relying on extrinsic evidence to try to
rewrite the exclusion of "all copyrights" from APA because the language is unambiguous and not
reasonably susceptible to SCO's interpretation. Moreover, even if the court considered the
extrinsic evidence, there is significant evidence that the exclusion "all copyrights" was deliberate
and consistent with the basic objectives of the APA. While there is no specific evidence that
business executives negotiated the issue of copyrights, the changes to the drafts of the agreement
show that a significant change occurred. Novell has provided extrinsic evidence supporting the
change in the language and the fact that it was relayed to SCO, whereas SCO has failed to present
any evidence from witnesses on its side of the transaction who had any involvement with the
actual drafting or negotiation of the language in the contract.
Attorneys for Novell and Santa Cruz exchanged specific communications about the scope
of the assets to be transferred. The initial draft of the APA included "all patents, patent
applications, copyrights . . . and all other intellectual property . . . that pertain to Unix or
UnixWare" in the list of assets to be transferred to Santa Cruz. Novell then revised the list of
assets to be transferred by deleting patents and copyrights, leaving only UNIX and UnixWare
trademarks as intellectual property to be transferred. These revisions were sent to SCO sometime
before September 18, 1995, because the September 18, 1995 draft, which ultimately became the
final versions of Schedule 1.1(a) and Schedule 1.1(b), already included such changes.
53
Extrinsic evidence of business negotiators prior to the finalization of the agreement is not
probative of the issue regarding copyrights because it is obvious that the deal changed over time.
The extrinsic evidence demonstrates that Santa Cruz did not have the cash necessary to complete
the deal. Therefore, the parties constructed a fairly complex mechanism to ensure Novell a
future revenue stream. Novell has presented evidence that the transaction evolved as it became
necessary for Novell to protect its future stream of revenue. Novell deliberately excluded the
UNIX and UnixWare copyrights to protect its retained right to receive 95% of future SVRX
revenues. Braham testified that the exclusion of UNIX and UnixWare copyrights ensured that
copyrights would not be part of the bankruptcy estate if Santa Cruz went into bankruptcy and the
retention of the UNIX and UnixWare copyrights strengthened Novell's legal basis for receiving
royalties and negotiating buy-outs of SVRX licenses. SCO, however, provides no extrinsic
evidence regarding the final negotiations of the deal that would contradict Novell's evidence.
In its attempt to argue that extrinsic evidence is necessary, SCO repeatedly overstates its
case. SCO contends that the exclusion of the UNIX and UnixWare copyrights would render the
APA meaningless because it would prevent Santa Cruz from pursuing its UNIX business.
Braham testified that Novell's sale of UNIX and UnixWare products to Santa Cruz under the
APA necessarily conferred a license on Santa Cruz to use the copyrights as needed to implement
the APA. Contrary to SCO's assertions, there is evidence that SCO did not need to own the
UNIX and UnixWare copyrights to pursue its UNIX business.
It is well established that a contract involving copyrighted works confers an implied
license to use the copyrights as needed to implement the transaction. In Food Consulting Group,
Inc. v. Musil Govan Azalino, 270 F.3d 821 (9th Cir. 2001), the defendant's predecessor paid
54
$175,000 to plaintiff to prepare a preliminary plot plan and final engineering drawings for a
proposal to build a shopping center. Id. at 824. When defendant hired a different firm to
complete the project using a modified version of plaintiff's plan, plaintiff claimed that the
defendant had no right to use or modify plaintiff's copyrighted drawings. Id. at 824-25. The
Ninth Circuit rejected this claim, holding that the contractor granted "an implied license to use
the revised plot plan to build the project." Id. at 828. The Ninth Circuit emphasized that "[t]he
central purpose of the contract" was the production of engineering documents for the shopping
center and given this purpose and the amount of money paid, "it would have been surprising if
the parties had intended for [defendant] to seek [plaintiff's] permission before using the plans to
build the project." Id.
In this case, while copyrights were excluded from the transferred assets, Santa Cruz did
acquire ownership of other rights in multiple versions of UNIX and UnixWare. Moreover, a
central purpose of the APA was to enable Santa Cruz to develop and distribute an improved
version of UNIX that combined Novell's "UnixWare" product with Santa Cruz's "OpenServer."
Implementing this purpose required Santa Cruz to copy, modify, distribute, and sublicense code
in Novell's UnixWare products. Thus, Novell's sale of its UNIX and UnixWare products
necessarily conferred a license on Santa Cruz to use the related copyrights as needed to carry out
the business activities contemplated by the APA.
The conclusion that Santa Cruz had a license to the UNIX copyrights is reinforced by the
fact that Santa Cruz indisputably did not acquire ownership of Novell's UNIX-related patents.
Santa Cruz needed to use these patents to be able to distribute and modify UNIX products.
Therefore, Novell's sale of its UNIX products to Santa Cruz necessarily conveyed a license to
55
use the patents as needed to implement the APA.
Burt Levine, a former paid consultant to SCO and in-house attorney for AT&T, USL,
Novell, and Santa Cruz, acknowledged that the APA "convey[ed] enough of a patent license
under Novell's patents that would be necessary for SCO to conduct its business." Similarly, he
agreed that if Novell had retained the copyrights, SCO would have had an inherent license to use
those copyrights as necessary in the business.
Furthermore, there is extrinsic evidence that during the period of time between the
signing of the APA on September 19, 1995, and its closing on December 6, 1995, the parties
spent considerable time going through the documents and determining what amendments should
be made. While there may be some claims that the original signing of the APA was rushed, there
were months of further negotiations regarding certain provisions before the Closing. This
resulted in the changes made in Amendment No. 1. Although changes to Schedule 1.1(a) and
1.1(b) were made in Amendment No. 1, there were no changes made to the intellectual property
provisions.
SCO also argues that there is no evidence that Novell publicly asserted ownership of the
UNIX copyrights between the APA's Closing and May 28, 2003. While the court fails to
appreciate why SCO believes that Novell would have had a reason for publicly announcing its
ownership of copyrights before that date, there is substantial evidence that Novell privately
asserted its right to the copyrights during that time period. When SCO contacted Novell to enter
into Amendment No. 2, Novell asserted its ownership of the copyrights and it refused to transfer
them. There is evidence that when Santa Cruz sold its business to Caldera, Santa Cruz was
unable to obtain a chain of title to the copyrights. In addition, there is evidence that in response
56
to several telephone calls from Darl McBride to various individuals at Novell, Novell refused to
transfer copyrights to SCO. A failure to publicly announce its ownership is not particularly
probative of whether the copyrights transferred.
In addition, the evidence with respect to joint copyrights being used on products does not
demonstrate that copyrights transferred under the APA. Novell's explanation for the joint
reference of both Novell's and Santa Cruz's copyrights is consistent with the fact that the
copyrights in the original UNIX and UnixWare products remained with Novell, and SCO
retained the copyright in the newly produced derivative products.
Therefore, even relying on the extrinsic evidence from the time the APA was signed and
closed, the court is convinced that the UNIX and UnixWare copyrights did not transfer under the
APA or the agreements executed in connection with the APA's Closing.
B. Did Copyrights Transfer Under Amendment No. 2 to the APA?
SCO contends that Amendment No. 2 clarified that the UNIX and UnixWare copyrights
were not Excluded Assets. Amendment No. 2 amended the Excluded Asset schedule to read:
"All copyrights and trademarks, except for the copyrights and trademarks owned by Novell as of
the date of the Agreement required for SCO to exercise its rights with respect to the acquisition
of UNIX and UnixWare technologies." APA Amend. No. 2 (Emphasis added to demonstrate
amendment.) SCO asserts that it is plain that the UNIX and UnixWare copyrights were so
required because of the substantial rights to the Business Santa Cruz received in the transaction.
Obviously, this contention is rebutted by the evidence above demonstrating that SCO could
conduct its business with a license to the copyrights.
Novell argues that Amendment No. 2 did not transfer UNIX and UnixWare copyrights
57
because (1) it does not constitute an instrument of conveyance under the Copyright Act, (2) it did
not include any provisions transferring ownership of copyrights nor did it purport to retroactively
amend the Bill of Sale to transfer copyrights, (3) it did not specifically identify which copyrights,
if any, should be transferred, and (4) Santa Cruz did not "require" ownership of the UNIX and
UnixWare copyrights for its business because it already had a license to use these copyrights as
needed to implement the APA.
The Copyright Act requires a signed written instrument to transfer ownership of
copyrights. Section 204(a) states: "A transfer of copyright ownership, other than by operation of
law, is not valid unless an instrument of conveyance, or a note or memorandum of the transfer, is
in writing and signed by the owner of the rights conveyed or such owner's duly authorized agent.
17 U.S.C. § 204(a). This requirement is meant to "enhance[] predictability and certainty of
copyright ownership." Effects Assoc. v. Cohen, 908 F.2d 555, 557 (9th Cir. 1990).
Section 204 is a prerequisite to a valid transfer of copyright ownership, and not merely an
evidentiary rule. A transfer of copyright is simply "not valid" without the required written
instrument. Konisberg Int'l, Inc v. Rice. 16 F.3d 355, 357 (9th Cir. 1994). Further, unlike a
statute of frauds, Section 204 is not subject to equitable defenses, such as estoppel, because such
defenses would "undermine the goal of uniformity and predictability in the field of copyright
ownership and transfer." Pamfiloff v. Giant Records, Inc., 794 F. Supp. 933, 937 (N.D. Cal.
1992).
"As with all matters of contract law, the essence of the inquiry here is to effectuate the
intent of the parties. Accordingly, even though a written instrument may lack the terms `transfer'
and copyright,' it still may suffice to evidence their mutual intent to transfer the copyright
58
interest." Nimmer on Copyrights § 10.03[2]. SCO contends that, under the applicable authority,
the language identifying the Assets by reference in Section 1.1(a) of the APA, as amended by
Amendment No. 2, meets the statutory requirements.
Amendment No. 2 does not include any provision that purports to transfer ownership of
copyrights. It merely revised the definition of the intellectual property category of the Excluded
Assets schedule. Unlike the APA, Amendment No. 2 was not accompanied by a separate "Bill of
Sale" transferring any assets. Nor did Amendment No. 2 purport to retroactively change the
scope of the assets transferred by the Bill of Sale that was executed in connection with the APA
in December 1995. Amendment No. 2 states that it "amended" the APA "[a]s of the 16th day of
October, 1996." Thus, Amendment No. 2 did not retroactively cause the Bill of Sale to transfer
copyrights that were expressly excluded from transfer by the APA and Amendment No. 1.
Furthermore, Amendment No. 2 also did not amend Schedule 1.1(a). It is undisputed that
the Bill of Sale transferred the Assets contained on Schedule 1.1(a). Even after the execution of
Amendment No. 2, however, Schedule 1.1(a) did not include any language regarding copyrights.
Also, significantly, Amendment No. 2 did not identify which copyrights, if any, were
"required for SCO to exercise its rights with respect to the acquisition of UNIX and UnixWare
technologies." The written instrument required by Section 204 should contain sufficient
information "to serve as a guidepost for the parties to resolve their disputes." Konisberg Int'l, 16
F.3d at 357. Amendment No. 2 does not meet these standards. SCO now claims that Santa Cruz
required ownership of all of Novell's UNIX and UnixWare copyrights to exercise its rights
regarding the UNIX assets it acquired under the APA. Novell, in contrast, contends that Santa
Cruz did not need to own these copyrights because Santa Cruz already had a license to the
59
copyrights.
Where the plain language does not resolve the issue, among the relevant extrinsic
evidence courts review to determine such "mutual intention" is "the surrounding circumstances
under which the parties negotiated or entered into the contract" and "the object, nature and
subject matter of the contract." Morey v. Vannucci, 64 Cal. App. 4th 904, 912 (1998). The
contract may be explained by reference to the circumstances under which it was made. Cal. Civ.
Code § 1647.
In this case, the extrinsic evidence surrounding Amendment No. 2 strongly favors
Novell's position that Amendment No. 2 was merely affirming Santa Cruz's implied license to
use the UNIX and UnixWare copyrights. Santa Cruz's in-house counsel, Steve Sabbath,
approached Novell's in-house counsel, Allison Amadia, about obtaining the UNIX and
UnixWare copyrights. Amadia testifies that she then reviewed the APA and spoke with Braham
to learn about the history of the agreement and the intent of the parties.
Santa Cruz's first proposed draft of Amendment No. 2 referred to copyrights "owned by
Novell as of the date of this Amendment, which pertain to the UNIX and UnixWare technologies
and which SCO has acquired hereunder." This proposed language clearly intended to transfer the
UNIX and UnixWare copyrights through the amendment. However, Novell rejected Santa
Cruz's proposed language. Amadia testifies that she told Sabbath that while Novell was willing
to affirm that Santa Cruz had a license under the original APA to use the UNIX and UnixWare
copyrights in its business, it was not willing to transfer ownership of the copyrights. As a result,
the final version of Amendment No. 2 does not refer to any specific copyrights and does not refer
to Santa Cruz's "acquisition" of any copyrights.
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This extrinsic evidence is consistent with the language of the Amendment, which reads
like an implied license. It is also consistent with the fact that the parties did not amend Schedule
1.1(a) when they executed Amendment No. 2. No specific copyrights were, therefore, included
as Assets to be transferred on Schedule 1.1(a). As in interpreting the original APA, "the whole
of a contract is to be taken together, so as to give effect to every part, if reasonably practicable,
each clause helping to interpret the other." Cal. Civ. Code § 1641. Construing the language of
Amendment No. 2 to be an affirmation of an implied license to the copyrights does not put the
amended Excluded Assets Schedule at odds with the transferred Asset Schedule 1.1(a).
There is also significant evidence that Santa Crux did not "require" the UNIX and
UnixWare copyrights. Santa Cruz had been able to pursue its UNIX business from December 6,
1995 until October 16, 1996, without any problems due to its lack of ownership of the
copyrights. Santa Cruz indisputably did not own the copyrights during those ten months. While
SCO has submitted testimony from witnesses stating generally that the copyrights were necessary
to running a software business, none of those witnesses give specific examples of how a lack of
copyright ownership impeded Santa Cruz's ability to exercise its rights under the APA. The
APA conferred an implied license on Santa Cruz to use Novell's copyrights as needed to
implement the purposes of the APA. That implied license allowed SCO to license the copyrights
to others. Because Santa Cruz already had that license, it did not require ownership of the
copyrights. Therefore, even if Amendment No. 2 had a means of conveyance or conveyance
language, Amendment No. 2 would not have transferred the UNIX and UnixWare copyrights as
there is no evidence that any of the copyrights were "required."
For these reasons, the court concludes that Amendment No. 2 did not transfer the UNIX
61
and UnixWare copyrights to SCO. Even if the Amendment met the requirements of Section 204,
the extrinsic evidence demonstrates that the parties intended only to affirm the implied license
granted under the original APA. Furthermore, SCO has not provided evidence that it required
ownership of the copyrights to exercise its rights under the APA. Accordingly, the court
concludes that Novell is the owner of the UNIX and UnixWare copyrights.
This court's conclusion that Novell owns the UNIX and UnixWare copyrights impacts
several of the claims asserted by both parties and several pending motions. Novell's motion on
the copyright issue is brought with respect to SCO's First Claim for Relief for slander of title and
Third Claim for Relief for specific performance. Novell is entitled to summary judgment on
SCO's First Claim for Relief for slander of title because SCO cannot demonstrate that Novell's
assertions of copyright ownership were false. First Sec. Bank of Utah v. Banberry Crossing, 780
P.2d 1253, 1256-57 (Utah 1989). In addition, Novell is entitled to summary judgment in its
favor on SCO's Third Claim for Relief seeking an order directing Novell to specifically perform
its alleged obligations under the APA by executing all documents needed to transfer ownership
of the UNIX and UnixWare copyrights to SCO. Neither the original APA nor Amendment No. 2
entitle SCO to obtain ownership of the UNIX and UnixWare copyrights.
SCO's motion for summary judgment on copyright ownership is brought with respect to
its First Claim for Relief for slander of title, its Second Claim For Relief for breach contract, its
Fifth Claim for Relief for unfair competition, and Novell's First Claim for Relief for slander of
title. SCO's motion for partial summary judgment on its own claims is denied. SCO's motion
with respect to Novell's slander of title claim focuses only on the title/ownership issue. A
slander of title claim involves a false statement disparaging title, that is made with malice and
62
that causes actual or special damages. First Sec. Bank of Utah, 780 P.2d at 1256-57. Because
SCO has not moved on the elements of malice or special damages, the court has no present basis
for dismissing Novell's claim. Accordingly, the court denies SCO's motion for summary
judgment on the Novell's slander of title claim.
II. Novell's Summary Judgment Motions on Special Damages and the Copyright
Ownership Portions of SCO's Unfair Competition Claim and Breach of Implied Covenant
Novell's motion for summary judgment on SCO's slander of title claim for failure to
establish special damages is now moot because the claim has been dismissed on other grounds.
Novell is also entitled to summary judgment on the copyright ownership portion of SCO's unfair
competition and implied covenant of good faith claims because SCO cannot establish that
Novell's assertion that it owns the UNIX and UnixWare copyrights was false.
Even if the court had found that SCO owned the copyrights, Novell would still be
entitled to summary judgment on the copyright ownership portions of SCO's claims of unfair
competition and breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing. Novell's
assertions that SCO does not own the UNIX and UnixWare copyrights do not state a claim for
unfair competition under Utah common law or statutory law, and do not state a claim for breach
of the implied covenant of good faith under California law.
Utah common law does not recognize an unfair competition claim based on allegedly
defamatory statements. See Proctor & Gamble Co. v. Haugen, 947 F. Supp. 1551 (D. Utah
1996), aff'd in part, rev'd in part, 222 F.3d 1262 (10th Cir. 2000). Recognizing that "no Utah
court has extended unfair competition . . . to include defamation in the marketplace," the court
declined to "create a new cause of action under the umbrella of unfair competition which would
essentially be identical to an already well-established cause of action and would offer no further
63
protection of commercial values." Id. at 1554. Similarly, in this case, SCO's unfair competition
claim is duplicative of its slander of title claim and there is no need to expand Utah law to create
a new cause of action.
Even though SCO argues that Novell did not publicly claim ownership in the copyrights
until it was presented with an opportunity to garner financial and strategic benefit in the market,
there is no evidence that Novell's public statements were based on anything but its good faith
interpretation of the contracts. The evidence in this case demonstrates that on several occasions,
between the time the APA was signed and Novell made its public statements, Novell privately
refused to transfer the copyrights to Santa Cruz and SCO. Santa Cruz attempted to gain the
copyrights under Amendment No. 2 to the APA, Santa Cruz attempted to get a chain of title from
Novell when it sold its assets to Caldera, and McBride repeatedly attempted to get Novell to
transfer the copyrights when SCO began its SCOsource initiative. Whether or not SCO acquired
those copyrights under the APA, it was aware that the parties disagreed about the ownership of
the copyrights. Therefore, there is no basis in the evidence before this court for finding that
Novell's public claims of ownership were a misappropriation or seizure of SCO's property.
Furthermore, Novell's allegedly false statements do not meet the statutory definition of
"unfair competition." Unfair competition is defined as "an intentional business act or practice "
that falls within the categories of "(A) cyber-terrorism; (B) infringement of a patent, trademark,
or trade name; (C) a software license violation; or (D) predatory hiring practices." Utah Code
Ann. § 13-5a-102(4)(ii) (2006). Novell's alleged statements claiming ownership of copyrights
based on its interpretation of the parties' contracts do not fall within any of these categories.
Novell's statements are not a breach of Section 3 of the TLA, which states that SCO owns the
64
Licensed Technology. Section 3 does not prohibit the parties from making statements about
whether or not copyrights were a part of the Licensed Technology that was transferred.
SCO's breach of contract claim alleges that Novell "breached the covenant of good faith
and fair dealing under the APA and TLA" by "numerous acts of bad faith," including "making
false and misleading statements denying SCO's ownership of the copyrights in UNIX and
UnixWare." Sec. Am. Compl. ¶ 99. SCO has cited to no California case holding that the
implied duty of good faith and fair dealing prohibits a party to a contract from making statements
related to its understanding of the rights that are conferred or not conferred by the contract.
A breach of the implied covenant requires "objectively unreasonable conduct, regardless
of the actor's motive." Carma Developers Inc. v. Marathon Dev. Cal., Inc., 2 Cal. 4th 342, 374
(1992). A comment to Section 205 of the Restatement Second of Contracts states that the
implied covenants are violated "by dishonest conduct such as conjuring up a pretended dispute,
asserting an interpretation contrary to one's own understanding, or falsification of facts." Id.
comment e.
Even if this court had ruled in SCO's favor on the copyright ownership issue, there is no
evidence to demonstrate that Novell's position was contrary to its own understanding of the
contractual language or objectively unreasonable given the history of the dispute between the
parties.
III. Novell's Summary Judgment Motion on SCO's Non-Compete Claims
Novell seeks summary judgment on the non-compete claims in SCO's Second Claim for
breach of contract and Fifth Claim for unfair competition. SCO's non-compete claims allege that
Section II.A(2) of the TLA and Section 1.6 of the APA contained non-compete provisions
65
prohibiting Novell from using the Licensed Technology to compete with SCO's core server
operating systems. Novell asserts that the provisions in the APA and TLA are limitations on the
scope of Novell's license to the Licensed Technology rather than non-compete clauses. Novell
also argues that it is entitled to summary judgment on the alternative ground that Santa Cruz's
sale of substantially all of its assets to SCO's predecessor in 2001 constituted a "Change of
Control" that terminated any non-compete obligations under the APA and TLA. Finally, Novell
contends that any covenant not to distribute competing products would be void under California
law.
A. The APA and TLA Provisions
Section 1.6 of the APA states that Santa Cruz must execute a license agreement
concurrent with the Closing of the APA which grants Novell "a royalty-free, perpetual,
worldwide license to (i) all of the technology included in the Assets and (ii) all derivatives of the
technology included in the Assets." APA § 1.6. This licensed back technology is referred to
collectively as "Licensed Technology." Id. Consistent with the court's conclusion above,
however, this Licensed Technology does not include the UNIX and UnixWare copyrights.
Therefore, to the extent that SCO's non-compete claims are based on its ownership in the UNIX
and UnixWare copyrights, which this court has concluded were retained by Novell, SCO's non-
compete claims are dismissed.
The parties, however, have not specifically addressed whether any of SCO's copyright
infringement claims are based on copyrights SCO may have obtained in derivatives of the
technology included in the Assets. In the copyright ownership discussion, Novell recognized that
SCO would have the copyright to the new merged product. Novell also recognized that joint
66
copyright notices are used that demonstrate a copyright ownership by SCO as of 1996. SCO's
non-compete and copyright infringement claims also relate to SUSE Linux. The SUSE Linux
claims have been stayed pending arbitration. Although those claims are stayed, Novell asserts in
its motion that it should not be precluded from raising a motion relating to the meaning and
interpretation of the TLA. Assuming that SCO has a basis for asserting a copyright infringement
action other than based on ownership in the UNIX and UnixWare copyrights, the court will
address the merits of Novell's motion.
Under Section 1.6 of the APA, Novell has a license to "use the Licensed Technology
without restriction for internal purposes and for resale in bundled or integrated products sold by
[Novell] which are not directly competitive with the core products of [Santa Cruz] and in which
the Licensed Technology does not constitute a primary portion of the value of the total bundled
or integrated product." Id. Under the TLA, Novell retains a "non-exclusive, non-terminable,
worldwide, fee-free license" in the Licensed Technology to "sublicense and distribute, and
authorize its customers to sublicense and distribute, such Licensed Technology and modifications
thereof, in source and binary form." This license as to external use was subject to the following
restrictions:
provided, however, that (1) such technology and modifications may
be sublicensed and/or distributed by Novell solely as part of a
bundled or integrated offering ("Composite Offering"); (ii) such
Composite Offering shall not be directly competitive with core
application server offerings of SCO, and (iii) the Licensed
Technology shall not constitute a primary portion of the value of
such Composite Offering.
TLA § II(A)(2).
67
Novell asserts that the clauses are limitations on the scope of the license, and if it has
exceeded the scope of the license, then SCO can only assert a copyright infringement claim, and
not a non-compete breach of covenant claim. SCO argues that Novell presents a false choice
between license limitations and covenants not to compete because it can bring state law claims
for breach of contract and unfair competition based on the same conduct as its copyright
infringement claim.
"Generally, a `copyright owner who grants a nonexclusive license to use his copyrighted
material waives his right to sue the licensee for copyright infringement' and can sue only for
breach of contract.'" Sun Microsystems, Inc. v. Microsoft Corp., 188 F.3d 1115, 1121 (9th Cir.
1999) (citation omitted). "If, however, a license is limited in scope and the licensee acts outside
the scope, the licensor can bring an action for copyright infringement." Id. The Sun court stated
that "[w]hether this is a copyright or a contract case turns on whether the compatability
provisions help define the scope of the license." Id.
The language and the structure of the APA and the TLA suggest that the restrictions are a
limitation on the scope of the license. The restriction immediately follows the description of the
license in both agreements. The restriction necessarily limits how Novell was entitled to use the
Licensed Technology and appears to define the scope of Novell's rights to use the Licensed
Technology. License limitations, such as the restrictions here, set the boundaries of the
agreement.
SCO, however, claims that the restrictions are covenants, and it cites to cases
recognizing that "[c]ourts have held a breach of an independent covenant of a copyright license,
such as a promise to pay royalties, is not a copyright infringement action, but a breach of contract
68
action." Kabehie v. Zoland, 102 Cal. App. 4th 513, 527-28 (2002) (holding state law claims not
preempted by Copyright Act when based on something qualitatively different from copyright). In
Fantastick Fakes Inc. v. Pickwick Int'l, Inc., 661 F.2d 479, 483-84 (5th Cir. Unit B 1981), the
court found that the "mere breach of a covenant may support a claim of damages for breach of
contract but will not disturb the remaining rights and obligations under the license including the
authority to use the copyrighted material."
SCO argues that the restrictions are a contractual covenant because they constitute an
agreement between the parties that is separate from the scope of the license grant. Regardless of
the scope of the license, if Novell had not agreed to the restrictions, SCO would not have
consented to Novell's retention of any license in the Licensed Technology. Furthermore,
"conduct that may give rise to a federal suit for copyright infringement may also give rise to a
state law claim in tort for unfair competition, tortious interference, or breach of contract." La
Resolana Architects, PA v. Clay Realtors Angel Fire, 416 F.3d 1195, 1199 n.2(10th Cir. 2005).
The Copyright Act, however, preempts such claims if the "work is within the scope of the
`subject matter of copyright'" and the "rights granted under state law are equivalent to any
exclusive rights within the scope of federal copyright." Id. (citations omitted). Nonetheless, the
court also recognized that a state law claim is "qualitatively different from, and not subsumed
within, a copyright infringement claim if the "state cause of action requires an extra element,
beyond mere copying, preparation of derivative works, performance, distribution or display." Id.
Novell contends that it has not made an argument that the Copyright Act preempts SCO's
state law causes of action and the preemption issue has no relevance to whether the language at
issue is a license limitation or a covenant. Although SCO cites to several Ninth Circuit cases for
69
the proposition that a failure to comply with the terms of a license to use copyrighted material
can give rise to both copyright and breach of contract claims, Novell claims that the cases do not
support SCO's position. Germaine Music v. Universal Songs of Polygram, 130 Fed. Appx. 153,
155 n.1(9th Cir. 2005) (stating in dicta that "If [defendant] was using songs without paying
royalties, it was likely both a breach of contract and a violation of the copyright."); Grosso v.
Miramax Film Corp., 383 F.3d 965, 967-68 (reversing district court's holding that plaintiff could
not bring a breach of contract claim when copyright infringement claim was dismissed); Guthy-Renker Corp. v. Bernstein, 39 Fed. Appx. 584, 587 (9th Cir. 2002) (upholding district court's
damage award for breach of contract and copyright infringement); Rano v. Sipa Press, Inc., 987
F.2d 580, 586 (9th Cir. 1993) (stating claims available to plaintiff where claim was preempted).
The court finds the analysis in Nimmer's Information Law, cited by SCO, helpful on the
issue of whether SCO can have a claim under both copyright and contract law. "Breach of the
license creates the potential of liability for contract breach and also the possibility of liability
under property rights law. Subject to considerations that preclude double recovery for the same
act, both forms of action may exist in a given case. The two claims entail completely different
remedy structures." Raymond T. Nimmer, 2 Information Law § 11:154.
"An infringement claim exists, in addition to the contract claim, however, if the licensee's
actions involve conduct prohibited by applicable property law and are either outside the scope of
the license or occur after the license was cancelled or terminated. In effect, the infringement
claim requires that the conduct not be protected by the license." Id. "A conclusion that a
particular act constitutes a copyright (or patent) infringement does not indicate that there can be
70
no contract law remedies with that same act. Both an infringement and a contract breach may
occur in the same act and be subject to remedies brought under one or both bodies of law." Id.
Nimmer's discussion of Kepner-Tregoe, Inc. v. Vroom, 186 F.3d 283 (2d Cir. 1999) is
also instructive:
the court held that a party who transferred rights to use a
copyrighted executive management system, retaining only the right
to use it in his own classes, did not have the right to use the system
in a software product. Thus, doing so exceeded the scope of the
license and was copyright infringement. Nevertheless, the court
awarded both copyright infringement damages and contract
damages. The infringement statutory damages stemmed from the
author's willful acts of copyright infringement, while the
contractual damage award represented the company's
consequential damages of having to enforce its copyright rights
stemming from the author's breach of the licensing agreement.
2 Information Law § 11:154.
In this case, SCO's breach of contract claims is based on Novell's alleged distribution of
Licensed Technology as part of Linux, which is a directly competitive system. Sec. Am. Compl.
¶¶ 97-98. SCO's copyright infringement claim also alleges that Novell infringed SCO's
copyrights by copying, reproducing, modifying, sublicensing, and/or distributing Linux products
containing unauthorized contributions of SCO's copyrighted intellectual property. Id. ¶ 116.
SCO also claims copyright infringement based on Novell's alleged use of the Licensed
Technology in an operating system that competes with SCO's core application server products or
in a product wherein the intellectual property constitutes a primary portion of the value of the
product. Id. ¶ 118. Therefore, SCO alleges that Novell exceeded the scope of its license and
breached the non-compete restrictions.
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Even though the restrictions are limitations on the scope of Novell's license, there
appears to be no restriction under the case law precluding SCO, as a matter of law, from pursuing
a claim for an alleged breach of those restrictions and copyright infringement. Outside the
context of determining whether the irreparable harm presumption in a copyright infringement
action applies for purposes of analyzing a preliminary injunction, as was the case in Sun, the
distinction appears to be meaningless because a party can obtain separate damages based on the
same alleged conduct.
Novell did not bring its motion based on the factual merits of SCO's copyright and
contract claims. Rather, its only position was that, as a matter of law, SCO could not state a
separate contract claim on the same provisions and conduct as its copyright infringement claim.
The court concludes that it is possible to have both claims. Therefore, the court denies Novell's
motion for summary judgment on this basis.
B. Change of Control
Novell's next basis for dismissing SCO's claims based on the TLA and APA non-
compete restrictions is that the license restrictions ceased to exist as a result of Santa Cruz's sale
of its UNIX assets to Caldera in 2001, which constituted a "Change of Control" as defined in the
APA. SCO does not dispute the fact that Santa Cruz sold substantially all of its assets to Caldera
in 2001. SCO asserts, however, that Santa Cruz's sale of assets to Caldera did not constitute a
Change of Control, as that term is defined in the APA, that would terminate the non-compete
covenants at issue.
The TLA states that the restrictions on Novell's license "shall cease to exist" in the event
of a "Change of Control" of Santa Cruz. Id. § II(B). The TLA states that "Change of Control"
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shall have the meaning attributed to it in the APA. Id. Under Section 1.6 of the APA, which
provides for the license back of assets and provides the basis for entering the TLA, it states that
"the license agreement shall also provide [Novell] with an unlimited royalty-free, perpetual,
worldwide license to the Licensed Technology upon the occurrence of a Change of Control of
[Santa Cruz] described in Section 6.3(c) hereof." APA § 1.6. Section 6.3(c) of the APA is
entitled "Expansion of Seller's Rights Relating to the Licensed Technology upon a Change of
Control" and provides that
Until two (2) years from the Closing Date, in the event [Santa
Cruz] has merged with, sold shares representing 50% or more of
the voting power of [Santa Cruz] to, sold all or substantially all of
[Santa Cruz's] assets to, or engaged voluntarily in any other change
of control transaction with, any party identified by [Novell] on
Schedule 6.3(a) hereof, or in the event any party identified by
[Novell] on Schedule 6.3(a) hereof, shall acquire shares
representing 50% or more of the voting power of [Santa Cruz],
[Novell] shall automatically have unlimited, royalty-free, perpetual
rights to the Licensed Technology.
Id. § 6.3(c).
Novell argues that based on the provisions of the TLA, Section 6.6 of the APA should
apply because it is the only provision that defines a "Change of Control." Novell claims that
because the TLA was entered after the APA, its provisions should control. Section 6.6(c) of the
APA is entitled "Change of Control" and provides that
For purposes of this Agreement, a "Change of Control" with
respect to one party shall be deemed to have occurred whenever (i)
there shall be consummated (1) any consolidation or merger of
such party in which such party is not the continuing or surviving
corporation, or pursuant to which shares of such party's common
stock would be converted in whole or in part into cash, other
securities or other property, other than a merger of such person in
which the holders of such party's common stock immediately prior
to the merger have substantially the same proportionate ownership
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of common stock of the surviving corporation immediately after
the merger, or (2) any sale, lease, exchange or transfer (in one
transaction or a series of related transactions) of all or substantially
all the assets of such party, or . . . (v) any other event shall occur
with respect to such party that would be required to be reported in
response to Item 6(e) (or any successor provision) of Schedule 14A
of Regulation 14A promulgated under the Exchange Act."
Id. § 6.6(c)
Section 1.6 of the APA, however, states that Section 6.6 is the provision for determining
a change of control of Novell: "In the event of a Change of Control of [Novell] (as described in
Section 6.6 hereof), the license granted pursuant to the license agreement shall be limited to
[Novell's] products either developed or substantially developed as of the time of the Change of
Control." Id. § 1.6.
The court disagrees with Novell's position that the TLA conflicts with the APA. The
TLA states that it and the APA "constitute the entire understanding between the parties with
respect to its subject matter." TLA § VIII. "Several contracts relating to the same matters,
between the same parties, and made as parts of substantially one transaction, are to be taken
together." Cal. Civ. Code § 1642. The TLA does not identify which Change of Control in the
APA applies. Section 1.6 of the APA, however, clearly directs that Section 6.3 applies to a
change of control of Santa Cruz, and Section 6.6 applies to a change of control for Novell. The
TLA merely codified the license agreed to in the APA, and the court finds no conflict between it
and the APA. While the language of Section 6.6 broadly states "For purposes of this Agreement"
and uses language that makes it appear that the provision would apply to both parties, the court
concludes that Section 6.3 is the applicable provision for determining whether a Change of
Control of Santa Cruz occurred for purposes of eliminating the license restrictions in Section 1.6
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of the APA and the TLA. The court, therefore, concludes that the license restrictions did not
cease to exist when Santa Cruz sold its assets to Caldera in 2001. Accordingly, Novell's motion
for summary judgment on these grounds is denied.
C. California Business and Professions Code § 16600
Novell further argues that the non-compete restrictions in the APA and the TLA are void
under California law. California Business and Professions Code Section 16600 declares that
"[e]xcept as provided in this chapter, every contract by which anyone is restrained from engaging
in a lawful profession, trade or business of any kind is to that extent void." California courts
have strictly construed Section 16600 as requiring non-compete clauses to be stricken unless they
meet one of the narrow exceptions provided for in the statute. See Hill Med. Corp. v. Wycoff, 86
Cal. App. 4th 895, 899 & n.4(2001). The only exceptions set forth in the statute relate to the sale
of the goodwill of a business, § 16601, and dissolution of a partnership or limited liability
company, §§ 16602, 16602.5.
SCO asserts that the covenants not to compete in the license are valid under California
law. SCO contends that California Business and Professions Code Section 16600 does not apply
to limitations on grants of rights that Novell would not otherwise have to SCO's property. In
King v. Gerold, 109 Cal. App. 2d 316, 318 (1952), the court held that Section 16600 did not
apply to a non-compete clause where the licensee is not "prohibited from carrying on his lawful
business" but is limited only in particular aspects of how he runs his business.
Other courts have also recognized that non-compete clauses used in the employment,
supplier-distributor, and franchisor-franchisee context during the term of the relationship, are not
void under Section 16600. Shaklee U.S., Inc. v. Giddens, 934 F.2d 324 (9th Cir. 1991) (allowing
75
restrictions to scope of distributor's activities); Great Frame Up Sys. Inc. v. Jazayeri
Enterprises, 789 F. Supp. 253, 255-56 (N.D. Ill. 1992).
The license in the APA and the TLA does not preclude Novell from pursing its business.
Rather, the license merely restricts Novell's ability to use SCO's property and is part of an
ongoing relationship between the parties. Therefore, the court finds that there is no restraint on
trade and the restrictions are not void under Section 16600. The court, therefore, denies Novell's
motion for summary judgment on SCO's non-compete claims on the grounds asserted by Novell.
To the extent that SCO's non-compete claims are based on ownership of the UNIX and
UnixWare copyrights, SCO's claims are dismissed as a result of this court's conclusion that
Novell owns the copyrights.
IV. Cross Motions on Novell's Fourth Counterclaim re: SVRX Licenses
The cross motions on Novell's Fourth Counterclaim seek a declaration from the court on
(1) whether Section 4.16(b) of the APA authorizes Novell to direct SCO to waive its purported
claims for breaches of SVRX license agreements with IBM and Sequent, (2) whether Section
4.16(b) of the APA authorizes Novell to take action on SCO's behalf when SCO refuses to waive
the claims, and (3) whether the IBM and Sequent Sublicensing Agreements are "SVRX
Licenses" under the APA.
Novell argues that a declaration of rights is proper in this case because SCO's purported
termination of IBM's and Sequent's licenses to SVRX technology creates an actual controversy
as to the parties' rights, authority, and obligations with respect to SVRX Licenses under the
APA. To determine the parties' rights and authority under Section 4.16(b), the court must begin
by analyzing the language of that provision. Section 4.16(b) provides
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[SCO] shall not, and shall not have the authority to, amend
modify or waive any right under or assign any SVRX
License without prior written consent of [Novell]. In
addition, at [Novell's] sole discretion and direction, [SCO]
shall amend, supplement, modify or waive any rights under,
or shall assign any rights to, any SVRX License to the
extent so directed in any manner or respect by [Novell]. In
the event that [SCO] shall fail to take any such action
concerning the SVRX Licenses as required herein, [Novell]
shall be authorized, and is hereby granted, the rights to take
any action on [SCO's] own behalf. [Santa Cruz] shall not,
and shall have no right to, enter into future licenses or
amendments of the SVRX Licenses, except as may be
incidently involved through its rights to sell and license the
Assets or the Merged Product . . . or future versions thereof
of the Merged Product.
APA § 4.16(b). Therefore, these rights state that they apply to "any" SVRX License. The scope
of Novell's authority, therefore, turns on the meaning of SVRX License.
The APA appears to set out a clear roadmap for determining the meaning of SVRX
License. Section 4.16(a) defines SVRX Licenses as those licenses "listed in detail under item VI
of Schedule 1.1(a)" of the APA. Item VI of Schedule 1.1(a) states "All contracts relating to the
SVRX Licenses listed below."5 Item VI then provides a list of SVRX software releases,
including UNIX System V Release Nos. 2.0, 2.1, 3.0, 3.1, 3.2, 4.0, 4.1, 4.2 and "[a]ll prior UNIX
System releases and versions preceding UNIX System V Release No. 2.0." Item VI, however,
does not provide a list of license agreements.
Novell argues that this wording plainly means that the term "SVRX Licenses" under the
APA includes all contracts relating to the UNIX System V releases listed in Item VI. This would
include contracts relating to UNIX System V Release Nos. 2.0, 2.1, 3.0, 3.1, 3.2, 4.0, 4.1, 4.2 and
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"[a]ll prior UNIX System releases and versions preceding UNIX System V Release No. 2.0."
Novell, therefore, claims that its Section 4.16(b) authority extends to all licenses relating to each
of the listed software products.
SCO contends that the term "SVRX Licenses" in the relevant APA provisions is
ambiguous on its face. Section 4.16 directs one to Item VI in Schedule 1.1(a) for a detailed list
of SVRX Licenses. Item VI has an introductory provision stating "all contracts relating to the
SVRX Licenses listed below," but then it lists SVRX releases, not licenses. These listed SVRX
releases are products to which a party would obtain a license.
The court agrees that there appears to be some ambiguity in the APA's attempt to define
SVRX Licenses. But an ambiguity only exists if the language is reasonably susceptible to more
than one meaning. Dore v. Arnold Worldwide, Inc., 39 Cal. App. 4th 384, 391 (2006). Both
parties assert definitions for the term SVRX License. Thus, the court must determine whether
the contract language is reasonably susceptible to both interpretations. "When a contract is
reduced to writing, the intention of the parties is to be ascertained from the writing alone, if
possible." Cal Civ. Code § 1639.
A. Novell's Interpretation
Novell does not believe that Item VI in Schedule 1.1(a) creates an ambiguity because it
contends that it is still clear that the intent of the language is that SVRX Licenses are all licenses
relating to the software releases listed in Item VI. That meaning requires a minor inferential step,
but it reconciles the ambiguity created by the listing of software releases instead of licenses. This
proposed meaning is also consistent with the APA's explanation that Novell was engaged in
developing a software product called UNIX System V, or SVRX, and selling binary and source
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code licenses to the various versions of SVRX software. Novell contends, therefore, that the
natural meaning of SVRX License includes any license to the listed SVRX releases. This
interpretation is also consistent with the APA's repeated use of the broad language "any" and
"all" SVRX Licenses.
SCO contends that Novell's interpretation that SVRX License means all licenses related
to the listed SVRX products is not consistent with the text of the APA and is predicated on a
fundamental misinterpretation of the limited rights Novell retained under Section 4.16 of the
APA. As with the copyright issue, the court does not agree with SCO's characterization that
Novell retained only limited rights under the APA. It is undisputed that the royalty stream
Novell retained under the APA consisted of substantial future revenue and was a significant part
of the consideration for the APA. Moreover, the language of Sections 1.2 and 4.16 of the APA
does not suggest that Novell retained only limited rights. Section 1.2 states that while SCO
acquired the SVRX Licenses and the legal title to SVRX Royalties, Novell retained all rights to
SVRX Royalties. Id. § 1.2(b). SVRX Royalties are defined as "all royalties, fees and other
amounts due under all SVRX Licenses." Id. § 4.16(a). Furthermore, the APA does not limit
Novell's rights under Section 4.16(b) to "certain" SVRX Licenses, it unambiguously extends
Novell's authority to direct SCO's actions as to "any SVRX License."
By interpreting SVRX License to mean all contracts related to the software releases listed
in Item VI of Schedule 1.1(a), SCO contends that Novell would be able to negate the intent and
purpose of transferring the entire UNIX and UnixWare business as set forth in the APA's other
provisions. SCO interprets the APA's provisions regarding its acquisition of assets too broadly.
Specifically, SCO fails to acknowledge that it acquired only "certain of the assets" comprising
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Novell's UNIX and UnixWare business and that the transfer of assets was subject to specific
exclusions on the Excluded Asset schedule. The transfer of assets under the APA was also
subject to the rights and obligations of Sections 1.2 and 4.16. The court finds no conflict
between the provisions describing the assets SCO acquired and Novell's retention of rights with
respect to all contracts relating to SVRX software releases.
SCO further argues that Novell's proposed interpretation for the definition of SVRX
License is at odds with the APA's license back provision and the TLA executed in connection
with the APA's Closing. SCO claims that the TLA license relates to the SVRX products listed in
Schedule 1.1(a)(VI) and would constitute an SVRX License under Novell's interpretation. If the
TLA is an SVRX License, SCO contends that Novell could breach the license and require SCO
to waive its breach. Section 1.6 and the TLA, however, grant Novell a license in the "Licensed
Technology." As this court concluded above, the Licensed Technology does not include the
UNIX and UnixWare copyrightsit includes only the technology included with the Assets listed
on Schedule 1.1(a). The TLA also gave Novell a license to derivatives of the technology in the
included Assets, which included the derivative works that Santa Cruz was to develop pursuant to
the terms of the APA.
B. SCO's Interpretation
SCO argues for limiting the definition of SVRX License to product supplement
agreements because it asserts that those agreements are the only agreements that generated the
SVRX Royalties to which Novell was entitled. Section 4.16 describes SVRX Royalties as "all
royalties, fees, and other amounts due under SVRX Licenses." Accordingly, SCO asserts that
Novell's interests in protecting its royalty stream would be accomplished by retaining rights to
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direct SCO's activities with respect to those product supplements. Novell, however, disputes
that the royalty stream comes only from product supplements because no fees would be due and
no license would be in place without the software and sublicensing agreements that make those
product supplements operative.
SCO's contention that SVRX Licenses are limited to only agreements that collect
royalties instead of SVRX software agreements, which specify the restrictions on a licensee's
source code rights, appears to conflict with the language of the APA and the integrated nature of
the licensing agreements entered into by AT&T and Novell. Given that AT&T, and then Novell,
would typically enter into a set of agreements in connection with each license of SVRX
technologya software agreement, a sublicensing agreement, and product supplements the APA
would need to make a clear distinction between such agreements in its definition of SVRX
License if it intended to exclude one or more of the agreements in the set. In Section 4.16 and
Item VI of Schedule 1.1(a), the parties made no attempt to carve out a distinction between
different types of agreements within the set.
Rather, Item VI states "all contracts" relating to the SVRX Licenses. The use of "all
contracts" is consistent with Novell's interpretation that all of the agreements in the set comprise
the SVRX License. The only ambiguity in Item VI is that it states that SVRX Licenses are listed
below, but SVRX products, to which licenses are obtained, are listed instead. To incorporate a
binary royalty distinction into the language of Section 4.16 and Item VI, however, would require
a complete rewriting of those provisions.
The language of Section 4.16(b) also indicates that an SVRX License must be something
that grants rights. Section 4.16 refers to "rights under" and "rights to" an SVRX License. SCO
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admits that product supplements did not by themselves grant rights. The software and
sublicensing agreements set forth the rights and obligations for the use and distribution of the
technology. Because the software and sublicensing agreements set forth the general rights and
obligations for the licensee's use of any software product, the product supplements identify only
the product the licensee had a right to use, the CPUs on which it had that right, and the fees the
licensor had a right to receive in exchange. The product supplement, therefore, serves only to
give content to terms defined in the software and sublicensing agreements"software product"
and "designated CPU."
Moreover, the set of agreements refer to and incorporate each other. The software and
sublicensing agreements state that the product supplement is a part of the agreement. The ability
to assign, amend, modify, supplement, or waive any right under any product supplement, as is
provided for in Section 4.16 for any SVRX License, would necessarily amend, modify, or
supplement the other agreements. Therefore, SCO's attempt to distinguish product supplements
from the other agreements used to license SVRX technology creates a distinction that is not
supported by the license agreements or the terms of the APA.
If the parties had intended to limit SVRX Royalties to only those revenues generated by
product supplements and to limit SVRX Licenses to only product supplement, they obviously
could have used far less sweeping terms than "all SVRX Royalties" and "all SVRX Licenses."
In Section 1.2, the parties could have merely stated that SCO had acquired "all product
supplements" but had only legal title in the royalties generated by such product supplements,
whereas Novell retained rights to receive royalties under "all product supplements." And, if
Section 4.16 was only intended to give Novell powers over the explicit subset of product
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supplements, it clearly could have been written that way as well. It was not. SCO's
interpretation runs contrary to the language of Section 4.16(b).
SCO's narrow interpretation of SVRX License produces a result that is contrary to SCO's
own conclusion that Novell's Section 4.16(b) authority extends to binary agreements. SCO
claims that SVRX source code licenses are not SVRX Licenses because "software agreements"
governing SVRX source code are not mentioned in Item VI of Schedule 1.1(a) but are expressly
referred to in Item III.L of that Schedule. SCO's interpretation, however, would exclude so-
called binary licenses from the universe of SVRX Licenses as well because Item VI does not
mention "sublicensing agreements" governing SVRX binary code either. Sublicensing
agreements, like software agreements, are expressly referred to in Item III.L. Therefore, SCO's
interpretation would mean that Section 4.16(b) does not apply to source or binary licensesa
result that is at odds with the whole purpose and structure of the parties' agreement.
Reviewing other provisions of the APA demonstrates that the parties knew how to
specifically distinguish between matters relating to source and binary code, including source and
binary agreements. In Schedule 1.1(a)(III)(M), the parties recognized binary licensing
agreements and in Schedule 1.1(b) there are several items with "Binary only" included in a
parenthetical after the item. Yet, in regard to SVRX Licenses under Section 4.16(b), the APA
makes no distinction whatsoever. And Schedule 1.1(a) refers to "all contracts" when it easily
could have stated binary only contracts.
SCO argues that Amendment No. 1 to the APA, which added Section 1.2(e), supports its
conclusion that there is a distinction between source and binary licenses. The introductory
language of Section 1.2(e) states that Santa Cruz is "entitled to retain 100% of the following
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categories of SVRX Royalties." Amend. No. 1 ¶ E(e). Section 1.2(e)(iv) then provides that,
notwithstanding its obligation to remit to Novell the SVRX Royalties due under SVRX Licenses,
Santa Cruz could keep royalties formerly due under "its own licenses from [Novell] acquired
before the Closing Date through Software Agreement . . . and Sublicensing Agreement . . . ." Id.
According to SCO, Section 1.2(e)(iv) thus expressly identifies the multiple "licenses" that
Santa Cruz had acquired "through" its software and sublicensing agreements, and the only such
licenses to which "royalties" could be "attributable" were the numerous SVRX supplements that
Santa Cruz had executed with Novell. SCO's attempt to make a distinction based on the fact that
it entered the software and sublicensing agreements with AT&T and its product supplements
with Novell is meaningless because Novell acquired all rights to the software and sublicensing
agreements when it acquired the UNIX business from AT&T. Moreover, Section 1.2(e)(iv)
recognizes that royalties come from software agreements and sublicensing agreements, which
does not help SCO's position.
Amendment No. 1 also added Section 1.2(f), which details the process and form of Santa
Cruz's obligation to submit monthly reports regarding SVRX Royalties. Section 1.2(f) states that
the "monthly reports shall be separately broken down by revenue type (i.e. source code right to
use fees, gross and net binary per copy fees, and support fees), by product, by customer . . . ."
Amend. No. 1 ¶ E(f). This language further demonstrates that SVRX Royalties include fees
other than merely binary fees.
Section 1.2, as amended, actually helps demonstrate that the parties intended SVRX
Royalties to apply to all of the agreements associated with licenses to SVRX technology. It also
demonstrates that when the parties intended to make a distinction regarding binary and source
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code fees, they specifically identified the distinction. This section expressly refers to certain
"source code right to use fees" as a category of SVRX Royalties. If, as SCO suggests, SVRX
License refers only to binary agreements, the APA's use of the modifiers "source" and "binary"
in particular instances and its use of "all" and "any" in connection with SVRX Licenses payment
obligations must be ignored. While the APA makes distinctions between source and binary code
in other provisions, it makes no such distinction in relation to SVRX Licenses under Section
4.16.
SCO also relies heavily on the language of Amendment No. 2 to the APA regarding
source code. In fact, SCO claims that the court can deny Novell's motion based on Amendment
No. 2 alone. Paragraph B of Amendment No. 2 states that "notwithstanding the provisions of
Article 4.16, Sections (b) and (c) of the [APA], any potential transaction with an SVRX licensee
which concerns a buy-out of any such licensee's royalty obligations shall be managed as
follows." Subparagraph 5 of Paragraph B then provides: "This Amendment does not give Novell
the right to increase any SVRX licensee's rights to SVRX source code, nor does it give Novell
the right to grant new SVRX source code licenses. In addition, Novell may not prevent SCO
from exercising its rights with respect to SVRX source code in accordance with the [APA]."
Although SCO claims that the language of subparagraph 5 has a different tone than the
subparagraphs that proceed it, all of the subparagraphs of paragraph B are limited to buy-out
transactions. These additional provisions do not amend Novell's rights under Section 4.16(b) of
the original APA. In fact, the amendment states that "notwithstanding the provisions of 4.16,"
the parties have agreed to the following procedures with respect to future potential buy-out
transactions. Because the Amendment's language regarding Novell's rights with respect to
85
source code rights is limited by the plain language of Amendment No. 2 to buy-out transactions,
it provides no insight into the source code rights SCO had or did not have under Section 4.16(b)
of the original APA. The amendment only states that those source code rights will not be altered
in the context of any future buy-out transaction.
Therefore, the court concludes that there is no support in the language and structure of the
APA for SCO's interpretation of SVRX License to mean product supplements rather than the
entire set of agreements relating to the licensing of SVRX code.
C. Role of Extrinsic Evidence
SCO seeks to introduce extrinsic evidence to help prove its interpretation that SVRX
License should be limited to product supplements. "Where the contract is integrated, parol
evidence still might be admissible if it is relevant to prove a meaning to which the language of
the instrument is reasonably susceptible." Haggard v. Kimberly Quality Care, Inc., 39 Cal. App.
4th 508, 519-20 (1995). However, because SCO's interpretation is a meaning to which the
language of the APA is not reasonably susceptible, there is no amount of extrinsic evidence that
would change the result. Therefore, the extrinsic evidence SCO seeks to introduce is
immaterial.6
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D. Breach of Covenant of Good Faith and Fair Dealing
Finally, SCO argues that Novell's motion should fail because of Novell's breach of the
covenant of good faith and fair dealing. SCO's Second Claim for Relief alleges that Novell
breached the covenant by, among other things, purporting to waive and revoke SCO's rights and
claims against IBM. SCO claims that Novell is not entitled to summary judgment on either
declaration it seeks in this motion because there are material issues of fact indicating that
Novell's waiver is in breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing.
California law precludes application of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing where
a party is acting within an explicit grant of contractual authority. In Carma Developers, Inc. v.
Marathon Development Cal. Inc., 2 Cal. 4th 342, 374 (1992), the court stated that it was "aware
of no reported case in which a court has held that the covenant of good faith may be read to
prohibit a party from doing that which is expressly permitted by an agreement. On the contrary,
as a general matter, implied terms should never be read to vary express terms."
87
The actions Novell took were pursuant to an express contractual provision granting it
authority to so act. Therefore, SCO's covenant of good faith and fair dealing argument is
contrary to California law. Accordingly, SCO's claim for breach of the covenant of good faith
and fair dealing does not preclude this court from granting Novell's motion with respect to its
rights and authority under Section 4.16(b) of the APA.
The court concludes that Novell's reading of Section 4.16(b) is the only reading that is
consistent with all of the APA's provisions, its Schedules, and its Amendments. SCO's attempt
to narrowly interpret SVRX License to include only product supplements is not tenable under the
language of the APA. A comparison of the SVRX License language in the APA with the IBM
and Sequent Licenses leaves no doubt that the IBM and Sequent Licenses are SVRX Licenses as
a matter of law. The IBM and Sequent Licenses are contracts that license the UNIX System V
software that is listed in Item VI of Schedule 1.1(a) of the APA. Therefore, the court grants
partial summary judgment to Novell on its Fourth Claim for Relief and declares that it was and is
entitled, at its sole discretion, to direct SCO to waive its purported claims against IBM and
Sequent, and SCO is obligated to recognize Novell's waiver of SCO's claims against IBM and
Sequent.
Accordingly, Novell's Motion for Partial Summary Judgment on its Fourth Claim for
Relief for declaratory judgment is granted and SCO's Cross-Motion for Summary Judgment on
Novell's Fourth Claim for Relief is denied.
V. Cross Motions Regarding Sun and Microsoft Agreements
Novell argues that SCO received payments under SCO's 2003 license agreements with
Sun and Microsoft which constitute SVRX Royalties that SCO was obligated to remit to Novell
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pursuant to Sections 1.2(b) and 4.16 of the APA. Based on this conduct, Novell seeks partial
summary judgment on its Sixth, Seventh, Eighth and Ninth Claims for Relief, which allege
claims for breach of fiduciary duty, conversion, constructive trust, and accounting. SCO has
filed a cross-motion for summary judgment on those same claims as well as on Novell's Third
Claim for Relief for breach of contract.
The APA expressly created an agency relationship between the parties with respect to
SVRX Royalties. Section 1.2(b) provides that Novell retained "all rights to the SVRX Royalties
notwithstanding the transfer of the SVRX Licenses" to Santa Cruz, who has only "legal title and
not an equitable interest in such royalties." APA § 1.2(b). Under Section 1.2, Santa Cruz agreed
"to collect and pass through to [Novell] one hundred percent of the SVRX Royalties as defined
and described in Section 4.16 hereof." Id. Section 4.16 further provides that SCO "shall
administer the collection of all royalties, fees and other amounts due under all SVRX Licenses."
Those revenues are defined as SVRX Royalties. Id. § 4.16(a).
A. Breach of Fiduciary Duty and Conversion
Novell seeks summary judgment on its Seventh and Eight Claims for Relief for breach of
fiduciary duty and conversion, alleging that SCO wrongfully retained payments made by Sun and
Microsoft that constitute SVRX Royalties under the APA. Because California law governs
actions arising from the APA, and Novell's claim arises from the agency relationship created by
the APA, California law governs. Nedlloyd Lines B.V. v. Superior Ct., 3 Cal. 4th 459, 468, 470
(1992).
To establish a breach of fiduciary claim under California law, Novell must show "the
existence of a fiduciary relationship, its breach, and damages proximately caused by that breach."
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Roberts v. Lomanto, 112 Cal. App. 4th 1553, 1562 (2005). A conversion claim is based on "the
wrongful exercise of dominion over another's personal property in denial of or inconsistent with
his rights in the property." Kasdan, Simonds, McIntyre, Epstein & Martin v. World Sav. & Loan
Ass'n, 317 F.3d 1064, 1069 (9th Cir. 2003). To establish conversion, therefore, Novell must
establish: (1) its "ownership or right to possession of the property; " (2) SCO's "conversion by
wrongful act inconsistent with the property rights of the plaintiff; and (3) damages." Id. at 1069.
Novell asserts that the undisputed facts establish that: (1) the APA creates an agency
relationship between Novell and SCO; (2) as Novell's agent, SCO has a fiduciary duty to
diligently collect, administer, and deliver to Novell any SVRX Royalties; (3) Novell is the
equitable owner of the SVRX Royalties and holds all right, title, and interest to them; (4) SVRX
Royalties are amounts due under all SVRX Licenses as defined in the APA; (5) the 2003 Sun and
Microsoft Agreements are SVRX Licenses because they license the same UNIX System V
technology listed in Item VI of Schedule 1.1(a) to the APA; and (6) SCO improperly retains the
monies it collected from the 2003 Sun and Microsoft Agreements.
SCO does not dispute the agency relationship created by the APA, but it contends that the
payments it retained under the 2003 Sun and Microsoft Agreements are not SVRX Royalties
under the APA. SCO asserts that the 2003 Sun and Microsoft Agreements are not SVRX
Licenses because "SVRX License" refers only to binary licenses in existence at the time of the
APA. SCO also asserts that the 2003 Sun and Microsoft Agreements are primarily Unixware
licenses with only incidental licensing of SVRX.
(1) Temporal Requirement on SVRX License
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The court has already determined that there is not a binary limitation on the definition of
SVRX License. However, SCO's arguments on this motion require the court to consider whether
the term "SVRX License" refers only to licenses in existence at the time of the APA.
In the prior discussion, this court concluded that the only possible interpretation of the
APA was that SVRX Licenses mean all contracts relating to the list of SVRX products provided
in Item (VI) of Schedule 1.1(a). Item VI has no express temporal requirement on "all contracts."
Therefore, there is no facial ambiguity. SCO seeks to introduce extrinsic evidence that the
parties intended the royalties to be limited to SVRX licenses in existence at the time of the APA.
SCO must, therefore, demonstrate that the language of the APA is reasonably susceptible to such
an interpretation. Dore v. Arnold Worldwide, Inc., 39 Cal. 4th 384, 391 (2006).
SCO first argues that nothing in the APA suggests that "all contracts relating to the
SVRX Licenses" extends to any future agreement that Santa Cruz or its successors might
execute. Section 1.2(b) refers to Novell "retaining all rights to the SVRX Royalties
notwithstanding the transfer of the SVRX Licenses to Santa Cruz." APA § 1.2(b) (emphasis
added). SCO contends that this language indicates that the licenses are those transferred at the
time of the APA. But Novell's retention of rights places no temporal restriction on the exercise
of that right. Furthermore, if Novell's argument that the licenses had to be "the" licenses in
existence at that time of the APA focuses on the use of the term "the" before SVRX Licenses,
SCO's assumptions are contradicted by the many instances in which the agreement refers to
"any" and "all" SVRX Licenses. Specifically in connection with SCO's obligations to collect
royalties, Section 4.16(a) refers to all royalties under "all SVRX Licenses."
Next, SCO points to Section 1.2(b), which requires SCO to pay royalties to Novell with
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respect to SCO's "future sale of UnixWare products." Id. There is no similar language in
Section 1.2(b) referring to future sales of SVRX Licenses. SCO posits that no reference is made
to future SVRX Licenses because Section 4.16 states that SCO "shall not, and shall have no right
to, enter into future licenses or amendments of the SVRX Licenses, except as may be incidently
involved through its rights to sell and license the Assets or the Merged Product . . . or future
versions thereof of the Merged Product." Id. 4.16(b).
Section 4.1(b) was amended, however, to include language stating that Santa Cruz "shall
not, and shall have no right to, enter into new SVRX Licenses except in the situation specified in
(i) of the preceding sentence or as otherwise approved in writing in advance by [Novell] on a
case by case basis." Amend. No. 1 ¶ J. Contrary to SCO's interpretation, this language
demonstrates that there are certain instances in which SCO was allowed to enter into new SVRX
Licenses. There are no additional provisions that would exclude these new SVRX Licenses from
the category of "all SVRX Licenses."
SCO further contends that Amendment No. 1 to the APA clarifies that Santa Cruz was
obligated to remit to Novell only the royalties that were being paid and that would continue to be
paid under the existing SVRX licenses. Amendment No. 1 added Section 1.2(e), which provided
certain categories of SVRX Royalties that SCO was entitled to retain. Id. ¶ E(e). Subsection (ii)
refers to "source code right to use fees under existing SVRX Licenses." Subsection (iii),
however, refers to "source code right to use fees attributable to new SVRX licenses approved by"
Novell. Id. (emphasis added). Therefore, Section 1.2(e) actually demonstrates that SVRX
Royalties include payments under existing and new SVRX Licenses.
If, as SCO suggests, SVRX License refers only to those licenses in existence at the time
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of the APA, the modifiers "new" and "existing" used in Sections 1.2(e) and 4.16(b) to modify
that term are rendered meaningless. Under general rules of contract interpretation, this court is
required to give effect to every part of the contract, if reasonably practicable. See Cal. Civ. Code
§ 1641 ("The whole of a contract is to be taken together, so as to give effect to every part, if
reasonably practicable, each clause helping to interpret the other.")
The court concludes, therefore, that there is no limitation in the APA to "then-existing"
SVRX Licenses. Such an interpretation would be contrary to express terms in the agreement and
render some express terms meaningless. Accordingly, the court rejects SCO's interpretation as a
matter of law.
(b) UnixWare Licenses
SCO further argues that the 2003 Sun and Microsoft Agreements are licenses for
UnixWare which license SVRX only incidentally. The parties dispute whether the SVRX
component of these licenses is only incidental. Nevertheless, it is undisputed that the 2003 Sun
and Microsoft Agreements have some SVRX component.
The language and structure of the APA's Royalties provision in Section 1.2(b) makes a
clear distinction between royalties from SVRX Licenses and UnixWare licenses. SVRX
Royalties are governed by Sections 1.2 and 4.16, and UnixWare royalties are governed by
Section 1.2 and Schedule 1.2(b). While SCO's obligation to pay royalties for the sale of
UnixWare products expired on December 31, 2002, its obligation with respect to SVRX
Royalties does not expire.
Particularly relevant to this motion are the provisions in Schedule 1.2(b) regarding the
conversion of an SVRX customer to UnixWare and Section 4.16(b) regarding the incidental
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licensing of SVRX technology with UnixWare. It is undisputed that Sun had previous UNIX-
related agreements with AT&T and Novell because the 2003 Sun Agreement purports to amend
and restate a 1994 agreement between Sun and Novell.
First, Schedule 1.2(b) addresses the conversion of existing SVRX customers to a
UnixWare derived product. APA Sched. 1.2(f). The process to determine if a customer "is
validly converted" is as follows:
The conversion of an SVRx customer to UnixWare will
validly occur and result in the UnixWare based revenue flowing to
SCO, without giving rise to a continued obligation to make
payment to Seller of royalties due under the SVRx licenses, only if
the following are true (note: if the customer continues to sell their
SVRx based product separately, then these SVRx revenues
continue to flow to Novell):
....
(ii) The product is derived from a source version of UnixWare . . .
and (i) none of the original SVRx code provided by Novell to the
customer, under the SVRx license, is included in the new product
or (ii) [Santa Cruz] shall demonstrate to [Novell]'s reasonable
satisfaction that an insignificant amount of original SVRx code is
so included and the adoption of UnixWare is so substantial as to
constitute a valid conversion.
Id. Therefore, even where a customer moves to a UnixWare product, SCO's SVRX Royalty
obligations to Novell can continue unless there is no SVRX code or only an insignificant amount
of SVRX code in the product. It is undisputed that some of the original SVRX code is included
in the Sun and Microsoft Agreements. And, based on the arguments presented in this motion, it
is also clear that SCO has not demonstrated to Novell's satisfaction that the amount of original
SVRX code in these licenses is insignificant. Moreover, whether or not Novell's present
satisfaction is reasonable, which could present a question of fact, the language suggests that SCO
was obligated to present the information to Novell before the customer would be considered
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validly converted. The facts here demonstrate that Novell was not made aware of the 2003 Sun
and Microsoft Agreements. Therefore, SCO never attempted to validly convert Sun or
Microsoft. Under Schedule 1.2(b), then, Sun and Microsoft would not be considered validly
converted.
The court must then analyze SCO's obligations with respect to incidental licenses of
SVRX under Section 4.16. Section 4.16(b) is amended in Amendment No. 1 to allow SCO "to
enter into amendments of the SVRX Licenses (i) as may be incidentally involved through its
rights to sell and license UnixWare Software or the Merged Product." Amend. No. 1 ¶ J. This
amendment further allows SCO to enter into "new SVRX Licenses . . . in the situation specified
in (i)." Id.
Although this amendment allows SCO to enter into new SVRX Licenses and
amendments of SVRX Licenses incidental to its license of UnixWare, nothing in the language
releases SCO from the obligation to remit "all royalties, fees, and other amounts due" under
those SVRX Licenses. The use of the defined term SVRX License in this section demonstrates
that even incidental licenses of SVRX are considered an SVRX License.
The APA only permits SCO to keep SVRX Royalties in the narrow circumstances
outlined in Section 1.2(e). Although SCO references Section 1.2(e)(ii)'s exception as applicable
to the Sun and Microsoft Agreements, Novell disputes that it applies. But, even if this exception
applies, it does not relieve SCO of its obligation to account for those fees. SCO agreed to
administer the collection of all amounts due under all SVRX Licenses. APA § 4.16(a). Section
1.2(f) specifically states that SCO's monthly reports are to be "separately broken down by
revenue type (i.e. source code right to use fees, gross and net binary per copy fees, and support
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fees) . . ." Amend. No. 1 ¶ E(f). And under Section 1.2(e), even those fees SCO retains are
considered "categories of SVRX Royalties." Id. ¶ E(e). Those fees, therefore, as still SVRX
Royalties. Section 1.2(e) merely provides that in those instances SCO may retain 100% of them
instead of passing them through to Novell. SCO's right to retain all of those fees, which may
account for a portion of the SVRX Royalties under the 2003 Sun and Microsoft Agreements,
does not relieve SCO of its administrative duties to account for and report all SVRX Royalties
according to the provisions of the APA.
The court concludes SCO was required to account for and pass through to Novell the
appropriate SVRX Royalties according to the SVRX portions of the 2003 Sun and Microsoft
Agreements. The parties dispute what portion of the payments SCO received from the 2003 Sun
and Microsoft Agreements would relate to the products SVRX licensed. Although this type of
allocation and accounting is a part of SCO's duties under the APA, such scrutiny of the Sun and
Microsoft Agreements by the court presents a question of fact.
As a matter of law, the court concludes that SCO breached its fiduciary duties to Novell
by failing to account for and remit the appropriate SVRX Royalty payments to Novell for the
SVRX portions of the 2003 Sun and Microsoft Agreements. Accordingly, Novell is entitled to
summary judgment on its Seventh Claim for Relief for breach of fiduciary duty, and SCO's
cross-motion on this claim is denied. To the extent that SCO has failed to pass through the
appropriate amount of SVRX Royalties under the 2003 Sun and Microsoft Agreements to which
Novell was entitled, Novell is also entitled to summary judgment on its Eight Claim for Relief
for conversion. Consequently, SCO's cross-motion for summary judgment on Novell's
conversion claim is denied.
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C. Constructive Trust and Accounting
Novell contends that a constructive trust is an appropriate remedy for a breach of
fiduciary duty and conversion. Novell's Sixth and Ninth Claims for Relief for constructive trust
and accounting seek remedies available at the court's discretion. Callery v. United States Life
Ins. Co., 392 F.3d 401, 408 (10th Cir. 2004). Under California law, the constructive trust cause of
action arises from California Civil Code §§ 2223 and 2224. Section 2223 provides that "[o]ne
who wrongfully detains a thing is an involuntary trustee thereof, for the benefit of the owner."
And Section 2224 provides that "[o]ne who gains a thing by fraud, accident, mistake, undue
influence, the violation of a trust, or other wrongful act, is, unless he or she has some other and
better right thereto, an involuntary trustee of the thing gained, for the benefit of the person who
would otherwise have had it."
Courts interpret these statutes broadly and apply them to "practically any case where there
is a wrongful acquisition of property to which another is entitled." Ornbaun v. Main, 198 Cal.
App. 2d 92, 99 (1961). To prove a constructive trust cause of action, Novell must demonstrate
the "existence of a res (some property or some interest in property), the plaintiff's right to that
res, and the defendant's gain of the res by fraud, accident, mistake, undue influence or other
wrongful conduct." Pegg, 782 F.2d at 1500.
In this case, the res is the SVRX Royalties, to which Novell retains "all right, title, and
interest." This res is traceable to the monies received from the Sun and Microsoft Agreements.
SCO's conduct also amounts to a breach of fiduciary duty, conversion, unjust enrichment, and
breach of express contract, all of which are sufficient "wrongful conduct" to impose a
constructive trust.
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In GHK Assoc. v. Mayer Group Inc., the trial court imposed a constructive trust based on
breach of obligations flowing from a contract. 224 Cal. App. 3d 856, 878 (1990). The appellate
court explicitly recognized the lower court's power to grant equitable relief in the form of a
constructive trust and held that the imposition of the constructive trust was proper to ensure the
owner received its damages. Id. Like the defendants in GHK, SCO breached its fiduciary
obligations by failing to remit the SVRX Royalties it collected from the SVRX License portions
of the 2003 Sun and Microsoft Agreements.
Although the court finds that Novell meets the requirements for the imposition of a
constructive trust, the question of fact as to the SVRX portion of the 2003 Sun and Microsoft
Agreements precludes the court from imposing a trust for the appropriate amount. Furthermore,
despite Novell's fears regarding its ability to collect its royalties, the appropriate amount of
SVRX Royalties can be determined at trial. Because of the question of fact, the court denies both
Novell's and SCO's motions for summary judgment on Novell's Sixth Claim for Relief for
constructive trust.
Novell also seeks the equitable remedy of accounting under its Ninth Claim for Relief.
The APA obligates SCO to give detailed monthly reports and to comply with audits. APA §§
1.2(b), (f). To the extent that SCO has failed to comply with these requirements with respect to
the 2003 Sun and Microsoft Agreements, the court notes that it has a continuing duty to fulfill its
contractual obligations. Novell also has continuing rights under the APA to conduct audits as to
SVRX Royalties.
The court assumes that, through discovery in this action, Novell has actually obtained the
information it needs to demonstrate its damages with respect to the SVRX Royalties it is due
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under the 2003 Sun and Microsoft Agreements. The imposition of an accounting usually arises
where "the facts are peculiarly within the knowledge of one of the parties." Van de Kamp, 204
Cal. App. 3d 819, 864 (1988). In this case, Novell acknowledges that it received copies of the
2003 Sun and Microsoft Agreement during discovery. It is also apparent that Novell has
received relevant financial records and documentation from SCO because it is aware of how
SCO accounted for the payments under the 2003 Sun and Microsoft Agreements. Because
Novell has the information that it would otherwise obtain through an accounting, the court denies
Novell's Ninth Claim for Relief for an accounting.
VI. Novell's Motion for Preliminary Injunction
As an alternative to its Motion for Partial Summary Judgment on these claims, Novell
seeks a preliminary injunction imposing a constructive trust and an accounting on the wrongfully
withheld revenues from the 2003 Sun and Microsoft Agreements. The court views this motion as
essentially moot given is rulings above. The question of fact that precludes the court from
imposing a constructive trust for the appropriate amount of SVRX Royalties due to Novell under
the 2003 Sun and Microsoft Agreements also precludes the granting of a preliminary injunction.
Therefore, the court denies Novell's motion for a preliminary injunction.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, the court concludes that Novell is the owner of the UNIX
and UnixWare copyrights. Therefore, SCO's First Claim for Relief for slander of title and Third
Claim for Relief for specific performance are dismissed, as are the copyright ownership portions
of SCO's Fifth Claim for Relief for unfair competition and Second Claim for Relief for breach of
the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing. The court denies SCO's cross-motion for
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summary judgment on its own slander of title, breach of contract, and unfair competition claims,
and on Novell's slander of title claim. Accordingly, Novell's slander of title claim is still at
issue.
The court also concludes that, to the extent that SCO has a copyright to enforce, SCO can
simultaneously pursue both a copyright infringement claim and a breach of contract claim based
on the non-compete restrictions in the license back of the Licensed Technology under APA and
the TLA. The court further concludes that there has not been a change of control that released
the non-compete restrictions of the license, and the non-compete restrictions of the license are
not void under California law. Accordingly, Novell's motion for summary judgment on SCO's
non-compete claim in its Second Claim for breach of contract and Fifth Claim for Relief for
unfair competition is granted to the extent that SCO's claims require ownership of the UNIX and
UnixWare copyrights, and denied in all other regards.
Furthermore, the court concludes, as a matter of law, that the only reasonable
interpretation of the term "SVRX License" in the APA is all licenses related to the SVRX
products listed in Item VI of Schedule 1.1(a) to the APA. Therefore, Novell is entitled to a
declaration of rights under its Fourth Claim for Relief that it was and is entitled, at its sole
discretion, to direct SCO to waive its claims against IBM and Sequent, and SCO is obligated to
recognize Novell's waiver of SCO's claims against IBM and Sequent. Accordingly, Novell's
motion for partial summary judgment on its Fourth Claim for Relief for declaratory judgment is
granted, and SCO's cross-motion for summary judgment on Novell's Fourth Claim for Relief is
denied.
Finally, the court concludes, as a matter of law, that the only reasonably interpretation of
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all SVRX Licenses includes no temporal restriction of SVRX Licenses existing at the time of the
APA. The court further concludes that because a portion of SCO's 2003 Sun and Microsoft
Agreements indisputably licenses SVRX products listed under Item VI of Schedule 1.1(a) to the
APA, even if only incidental to a license for UnixWare, SCO is obligated under the APA to
account for and pass through to Novell the appropriate portion relating to the license of SVRX
products. Because SCO failed to do so, it breached its fiduciary duty to Novell under the APA
and is liable for conversion.
The court, however, is precluded from granting a constructive trust with respect to the
payments SCO received under the 2003 Sun and Microsoft Agreements because there is a
question of fact as to the appropriate amount of SVRX Royalties SCO owes to Novell based on
the portion of SVRX products contained in each agreement. Furthermore, because Novell has
obtained the information that it would otherwise obtain through an accounting during the course
of this litigation, the court denies Novell's Ninth Claim for Relief for an accounting. However,
the court also notes that SCO has a continuing contractual obligation to comply with the
accounting and reporting requirements set forth in the APA.
Accordingly, Novell's Motion for Partial Summary Judgment or Preliminary Injunction
[Docket No. 147] is GRANTED IN PART AND DENIED IN PART; SCO's Cross-Motion for
Summary Judgment or Partial Summary Judgment on Novell's Third, Sixth, Seventh, Eighth and
Ninth Counterclaims [Docket No. 180] is GRANTED IN PART AND DENIED IN PART;
Novell's Motion for Partial Summary Judgment on its Fourth Claim [Docket No. 171] is
GRANTED; SCO's Cross-Motion for Partial Summary Judgment on Novell's Fourth Claim
[Docket No. 224] is DENIED; SCO's Motion for Partial Summary Judgment on its First,
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Second, and Fifth Claims and Novell's First Claim [Docket No. 258] is DENIED; Novell's
Motion for Partial Summary Judgment on Copyright Ownership of SCO's Second Claim for
Breach of Contract and Fifth Claim for Unfair Competition [Docket No. 271] is GRANTED;
Novell's Motion for Partial Summary Judgment on SCO's Non-Compete Claims in its Second
and Fifth Claims [Docket No. 273] is GRANTED IN PART AND DENIED IN PART; Novell's
Motion for Summary Judgment on SCO's First Claim for Slander of Title and Third Claim for
Specific Performance [Docket No. 275] is GRANTED; and Novell's Motion for Summary
Judgment on SCO's First Claim for Slander of Title for Failure to Establish Special Damages
[Docket No. 277] is MOOT.
DATED this 10th day of August, 2007.
BY THE COURT:
__________________________________
DALE A. KIMBALL,
United States District Judge
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1
Five years after the APA, Santa Cruz was purchased by Caldera. Caldera changed
its name to The SCO Group.
2
The record is not clear as to whether Braham was the primary drafter of the APA for
Novell or both parties. Nevertheless, in the APA, the parties agreed that they had both been
represented by counsel during the negotiation and execution of the agreement and waived the
application of any law "providing that ambiguities in an agreement . . . will be construed against
the party drafting such agreement." APA § 9.9.
3
IBM did agree, however, to pay for any additional copies of source code of the software
productUNIX System V, Release 3.2according to the fees listed in a prior product supplement.
4
Pursuant to the terms of the APA, the agreement "shall be governed by and construed in
accordance with the laws of the State of California regardless of the laws that might otherwise
govern under applicable principles of conflicts of laws thereof." APA § 9.8.
5
This introductory language was amended by Amendment No. 1 to also include
Auxiliary Product Licenses, which would be collectively referred to as "SVRX Licenses."
6
Even if this court were to consider SCO's extrinsic evidence, it does not uniformly
support SCO's interpretation as SCO claims. If the contract language was susceptible to SCO's
interpretation, SCO's evidence would, at most, create only a question of fact for the jury.
Prior to this litigation, SCO had publicly announced that its administrative duties under
the APA extend to "customers who deploy SVRX technology." SCO did not report that its
administrative duties are limited to a more narrow set of SVRX customers licensing binary
SVRX products. In addition, in May 1996, Bill Broderick of Santa Cruz wrote a letter to Novell
recognizing that the APA "requires prior written approval from Novell for all new agreements or
changes to current agreements relating to UNIX System V."
SCO claims the circumstances surrounding the IBM buyout support its position because it
demonstrates that Novell's rights under Section 4.16 were limited. The dispute focused on Novell's unilateral right to grant the buyout of binary royalties. But SCO concedes that
Amendment No. X to the IBM SVRX Licenses involved a grant of additional source code rights
to IBM. Also, significantly, SCO does not dispute that it treated all of the SVRX revenue from
Amendment No. X as subject to the 95/5 split that the APA applied exclusively to SVRX
Licenses. In addition, Amendment No. X states that under the APA "Novell retained certain
rights with respect to the Related Agreements." Amendment No. X defined the "Related
Agreements" as certain software and sublicensing agreements. Thus, Santa Cruz agreed in
Amendment No. X that Novell's APA-retained rights extended to all those agreements.
Even when SCO purported to terminate IBM's System V license agreements and SCO's
CEO wrote to Novell refusing to waive its purported claims against IBM, he specifically called
IBM's System V license agreements "IBM's SVRX License."
This evidence regarding the parties' conduct is close in time to the execution of the APA
and, therefore, more persuasive as to the meaning of the agreement. However, even the witness
testimony, which is less reliable given the passage of years and witnesses' mistaken beliefs, does
not, as SCO claims, entirely support its interpretation. There is substantial testimony supporting
Novell's position as well.
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