9th Circuit Agrees with Woz – No Promise to Pay, No Desny Claim

The Briefing by the IP Law Blog - A podcast by Weintraub Tobin - Fridays

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The recent Reilly v. Wozniak 9th Circuit decision upheld a 1950s ruling that requires a promise to pay to be present for an implied contract to exist. Scott Hervey and Josh Escovedo discuss this case and how the Desny decision applies to idea theft cases in California in this episode of The Briefing by the IP Law Blog. Watch this episode on the Weintraub YouTube channel here. Show Notes: S: In a previous episode we discussed recent applications of the 1950 case, Desny v Wilder, which set the ground rules for an idea theft case in California. A recent non-citable 9th Circuit opinion on an idea theft looks at the promise to pay element.  We are going to talk about this on the next installment of The Briefing by the IP Law Blog. In California, an idea theft claim is based in large part on the California supreme court case of Desny v Wilder. In Desny, the plaintiff Victor Desny wrote a script depicting the real-life story of Floyd Collins, a boy who made headlines after he was trapped in a cave eighty feet underground.  In an effort to market his script, Desny called Billy Wilder, a writer, producer and director at Paramount Pictures. Desny could not get through to Wilder and subsequently stripped his scrip to the bare facts so that Wilder’s secretary could copy it in short-hand over the phone.  After reading his synopsis, Desny told Wilder’s secretary that Wilder and Paramount could use the script only if they paid him a reasonable amount for doing so.  Shortly thereafter, Wilder created his own movie script mirroring Densy’s. Because Densy’s script was based on historical facts, and because Desny only conveyed the bare minimum of those facts to Wilder’s secretary, both parties conceded for the purpose of the appeal that the synopsis was not sufficiently original to form the basis of a federal copyright claim. The Court, however, held that Densy stated sufficient facts to establish the existence of an implied-in-fact contract between the parties. The California Supreme Court explained that where an idea is furnished by one party to another, a contract sometimes may be implied even in the absence of an express promise to pay; a contract exists where “the circumstances preceding and attending disclosure, together with the conduct of the offeree acting with knowledge of the circumstances, show a promise to pay.” J: In the recent case of Ralph Reilly v. Steve Wozniak, et al, Reilly, an IT professor, claimed that he had a verbal agreement with Wozniak to create a new high-tech online university based on a course design and outline developed by Reilly.  Apparently, at least accordingly to Reilly, the two shook hands on a deal, and Reilly developed the course outline.  Later Reilly learned that Wozniak had partnered with Southern Career Institute Inc. to create "Woz U.”  Reilly claims that he went to two pitch meetings with Wozniak.  Wozniak claimed that he never agreed to compensate Reilly and further that he never made any money off of Reilly’s idea because Southern Career Institute reached out to Wozniak to license his name and likeness. S: In an appeal from the district court’s dismissal of Reilly’s contract claim, Reilly argued that a party claiming breach of a contract for conveyance and use of an idea does not need to show that the claimant offered the idea to the defendant for sale, because California law provides a broad equitable basis to find implied-in-fact contracts for the use of ideas.  Reilly alleged that it was understood that he and Wozniak would “jointly market,” and be his “partner in exploiting,” Reilly’s idea.