Copyright Is In The Cards
Faessler v. United States Playing Card Co 1:05-cv-00581; U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Ohio
Michael Faessler was a cadet at the United States Military Academy when he composed a playing card set modeled on the military ranking system (lowest rank correlates to lowest card and so on). Faeseller registered his set with the United States Copyright Office; offered to sell the cards through the military commissaries but was declined that opportunity.
Upon learning that his identical card sets were being manufactured, and distributed by the military commissary, Faessler sued.
Two of the defenses raised were that there is no copyright in the set; and that the location of copyright notice solely on the joker card and not on any of the other cards caused any copyright to be forfeit and the work in the public domain.
The trial court held that the copyright in the set is valid and enforceable; and that the notice on the joker card alone is sufficient.
