Game (Perhaps) Over for Copyright Suit Involving Baseball Novel, "The Art of Fielding"
It's the college baseball championship game, ninth inning, two outs, 0-2 count, the team is down by one run, and the main character is at bat in a pinch-hitting role. And here's the pitch….the batter is hit by the ball and takes first base (an unexpected twist on the Mighty Casey striking out or the dramatic outcome in The Natural).
This climactic beaning scene appears in both Charles Green's ("Green" or "Plaintiff") work Bucky's 9th, a novel that the author unsuccessfully tried to place with various publishers, and in the best-selling 2011 novel The Art of Fielding ("TAOF"), by Chad Harbach ("Harbach"). Armed with a spreadsheet that outlined a host of other purported similarities between the two books, Green filed an idea theft lawsuit in September 2017 alleging Harbach misappropriated the content of Green's work and borrowed other plot and setting elements to create an infringing work that was "substantially similar" to Bucky's 9th. This month, however, a New York district court rung up Green on strikes and dismissed his copyright infringement suit, finding that, when read in context, none of the plaintiff's allegations of substantial similarity hold up. (Green v. Harbach, No. 17-06984 (S.D.N.Y. July 9, 2018)).
Green had played baseball at Swarthmore College in the 1980s and parlayed that experience into Bucky's 9th, which tells the story of a former star pitcher who dropped out of a top school after the surprising death of his father and fell idle until a former friend of his father convinced him to play ball for a small college for the deaf (even though Bucky is not deaf). Bucky hopes to find out the circumstances behind his father's death and also bring success to the baseball program that is slated to be shuttered (and also to navigate relationships with teammates and a new love interest). On the eve of the championship game, Bucky is threatened with exposure of his feigned deafness and must reconcile with his girlfriend, causing him to skip the big game. Still, Bucky arrives in the ninth to pinch hit and gets plunked; yet his team still loses the game.
The Art of Fielding is a baseball novel and character study that takes place over several years at a small Division III college, spinning the story of Henry, who becomes a star player, eventually loses confidence in his abilities and drops out, only to return to pinch-hit in the ninth inning of the championship game. Harbach played baseball in high school and eventually produced an early draft of TAOF in conjunction with an MFA program at the University of Virginia. TAOF's path to publication took nearly a decade, as Harbach languished in the minors struggling to complete the novel before finally reaching the show with the book's release in 2011.
According to the complaint, there are "extensive" similarities between Bucky's 9th and TAOF in terms of premise, setting, plot and timing of events; the plaintiff alleged that Harbach copied his "core narratives," namely, the "Baseball Prodigy-Comes-of-Age-Plot" within the unconventional setting of small-time college baseball and the "startlingly" shared final scenes of the third act when the protagonist rejoins the team in the ninth inning, only to be hit by a pitch. The complaint also contains an extensive appendix with a side-by-side analysis of the similarities between the two works, including similar plotlines, and shared phrases and word choice.
Green previously had voiced his opinions about the similarities between his work and TAOF, but after learning that TAOF had been optioned as a film, Green brought a copyright infringement suit seeking damages and injunctive relief that would bar Harbach from taking further steps regarding the film version of TAOF. Harbach moved to dismiss, arguing that the two works were not substantially similar because they have little in common beyond stock elements and the general idea of "an underdog college baseball team overcoming the odds to achieve success," as well as "a list of incidental, cherry-picked 'random duplications'" that Harbach contended were taken out of context.
To establish copyright infringement, two elements must be proven: (1) ownership of a valid copyright, and (2) copying of constituent elements of the work that are original. According to the court, in the absence of direct evidence, copying generally is proven by showing (a) that the defendant had access to the copyrighted work and (b) the substantial similarity of protectable material in the two works. Thus, the court stated that it would have to examine the similarities in such aspects as the total concept and feel, theme, characters, plot, sequence, pace and setting of the two works in question. Moreover, the court explained that under the scenes a faire doctrine, "sequences of events that necessarily result from the choice of a setting or situation do not enjoy copyright protection" (e.g., stock elements in a story, such as the existence of cowboys and shootouts in a classic western, would not receive protection).
In this doubleheader of sorts, the district court held that although both works are about a struggling Division III baseball team, the two works are not substantially similar because the features of TAOF alleged to be similar to Bucky's 9th are "either abstract ideas, scenes a faire, or trivial details." For example, the court stated that the two works are entirely different as to why and how the protagonists arrived at the team and as to the nature of their "coming of age." In the court's mind, Bucky's development is focused on his father's death and the saga surrounding his feigned deafness and Henry's story is more about navigating college life and coming to terms with his baseball talent. Moreover, the court noted that the plaintiff mixed and matched in advancing arguments about other similarities in plot, but that such events occurred between characters of different ages or positions or happened in different contexts. In examining the related ninth inning beaning scenes, the court found the plaintiff's arguments a little off the plate and ruled the two climactic scenes were not substantially similar because, among other things, Henry and Bucky are initially absent from the championship game for different reasons, each player is beaned for different reasons (e.g., Bucky is the best player and is thrown at intentionally while Henry is a "lesser substitute" and leans into a pitch voluntarily), and the ultimate outcomes of the stories are dissimilar.
Hoping to go extra innings, Green filed a notice of appeal on July 16, 2018, so we will have to wait and see if the Second Circuit believes Green's suit can at least make it safely to first base and avoid dismissal.