U.S. District Judge Alison Nathan in Manhattan on Monday said
Christian Charles took too long to sue, having waited six years
to file his lawsuit after Seinfeld had in 2012 rejected his
copyright claim. The statute of limitations was three years.
"Today's victory is a complete vindication," Seinfeld's lawyer,
Orin Snyder, said in a statement. "Jerry created 'Comedians in
Cars' and this lawsuit was nothing but a money-grab seeking to
capitalize on the success of the show. We are pleased that the
court saw through the noise."
Charles, who said he had worked with Seinfeld since 1994, said
he mentioned the idea to Seinfeld for "Comedians in Cars" as
early as 2002, when pitching a project called "Two Stupid Guys
in a Stupid Car Driving to a Stupid Town."
He said he reminded Seinfeld of that pitch when the comedian in
2011 said he was mulling an idea that became "Comedians in
Cars."
Their relationship allegedly broke down after the pilot, which
Charles directed, was shot in October 2011, and Charles sought
more credit and compensation than Seinfeld wanted to give.
Netflix and Sony Pictures Television are among the other
defendants. "Comedians in Cars" began broadcasting on Crackle,
and moved to Netflix last year.
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"We are, of course, disappointed," Peter Skolnik, a lawyer for
Charles, said in an email where he also faulted Seinfeld's
alleged "egregious, shabby conduct." Skolnik said he would speak
with Charles to discuss their next steps.
Seinfeld had argued that Charles sued only after having
"learned" that "Comedians in Cars" had become a hit, and that
Netflix was paying $750,000 an episode.
Nathan, however, said it mattered more that Charles had been
aware in 2012 that the show, which does not credit him, was
being made.
"Charles believed that 'Seinfeld would eventually acknowledge
Charles' authorship and ownership and bring him in,'" Nathan
wrote, quoting from the complaint. "Because Charles was on
notice that his ownership claim had been repudiated since at
least 2012, his infringement claim is time-barred."
(Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by Matthew
Lewis)
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