In a 5-4 decision, the Supreme Court of the United States held that copyright law does not protect annotations contained in the official annotated compilation of state statutes. Georgia v. Public.Resource.Org, Inc., Case No. 18-1150 (Supr. Ct. Apr. 27, 2020) (Roberts, Justice) (Thomas, Justice, dissenting) (Ginsburg, Justice, dissenting).

Background

The State of Georgia has one official code: the Official Code of Georgia Annotated (OCGA). The OCGA is compiled and annotated by Lexis under a contract with the Georgia Revision Commission, an arm of the Georgia General Assembly, with summaries of judicial opinions applying a given statute, editor's notes, excerpts from law review articles and other research references. The contract specifies that the Commission owns the copyright to the OCGA and grants Lexis the exclusive right to publish, distribute and sell copies of the OCGA. The nonprofit group Public.Resource.Org, Inc. (PRO), which is dedicated to providing free access to public documents, purchased a copy of the OCGA and distributed it via its free website. The Commission sued PRO for copyright infringement as it related to the annotations. PRO filed a counterclaim seeking a declaratory judgment that the entire OCGA, including annotations, fell in the public domain.

The district court concluded that the annotations were eligible for copyright protection because they were "not enacted into law" and lacked "the force of law," and enjoined PRO from its distribution activities. The US Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit reversed, finding that the OCGA could not be copyrighted because the OCGA was approved by the Georgia General Assembly. The 11th Circuit held that the true "author" of the OCGA was the state and thus the OCGA was in the "public domain." The State of Georgia appealed to the Supreme Court.

Opinion of the Court

Analyzing the case under the venerable "government edicts" doctrine, the Supreme Court held the OCGA annotations ineligible for copyright, explaining that the animating principle is that no one can own the law. The doctrine focuses on the construction of the statutory term "author" and holds that judges cannot be the "author[s]" of "whatever work they perform in their capacity" as lawmakers. The Court explained that legislators, in a manner similar to judges, have the authority to make law and thus cannot be "authors" under the Copyright Act. The Court explained that the doctrine applies to whatever work legislators perform in their capacity as legislators, including explanatory and procedural materials created in the discharge of their legislative duties. Applying this framework, the Court held that the annotations to the OCGA are not copyrightable because the author of the annotations under the Copyright Act is the Commission, which functions as an arm of the Georgia legislature in creating the annotations in the discharge of its legislative duties.

The Court rejected Georgia's argument that excluding the OCGA annotations from copyright protection conflicts with the text of the Copyright Act, which permits "annotations" among the kinds of work eligible for protection. The Court found that the relevant provision refers only to "annotations . . . which . . . represent an original work of authorship," and that the OCGA annotations do not fit that description because they are prepared by a legislative body that cannot be deemed an "author" of the works it creates in its official capacity.

The Court also rejected Georgia's attempt to frame the government edicts doctrine to focus exclusively on whether a particular work has the force of law. The Court noted that Georgia's conception of the doctrine as distinguishing between different categories of content with different effects has less of a textual footing than the traditional formulation, which focuses on the identity of the author. The Court explained that Georgia's characterization of the OCGA annotations as non-binding and non-authoritative undersells the practical significance of the annotations to litigants and citizens, and would logically permit states to hide all non-binding judicial and legislative work product-including dissents and legislative history-behind a paywall.

Justice Thomas penned a dissenting opinion (in which Justice Alito joined and Justice Breyer joined in part) arguing that the 19th century government edicts doctrine only establishes that judicial opinions cannot be copyrighted, but does not exclude from copyright protection notes that are prepared by an official court reporter and published together with the reported opinions. The dissent argued that there is no reason why the same logic would not apply to statutes and regulations, meaning that while statutes and regulations cannot be copyrighted, accompanying notes lacking legal force can be protected.

Justice Ginsburg, joined by Justice Breyer, also dissented, arguing that annotations to the OCGA are not written by the Commission in its legislative capacity. This dissent argued that annotations are not part of the lawmaking process because:

  • The annotations are not created contemporaneously with the statutes, but are instead drafted after lawmaking ends.
  • The annotations do not convey the legislature's view of the law, but instead summarize writings in which others express views on a given statute.

The annotations aim to inform the citizenry at large and are not commissioned by the legislature to aid in lawmaking.

Originally published May 7, 2020

The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.