I, too, am a practicing lawyer, primarily on the defense side in aviation 
litigation. I totally agree with Mr. Burwells' comments. 

One of the members of this group is a sitting United States District Court 
judge. He is an active pilot whom I've for decades. 

I seriously doubt that many of us are "sue happy". 

Jerry Eichenberger
Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry

-----Original Message-----
From: <[email protected]>
Sender: [email protected]
Date: Mon, 6 Sep 2010 17:52:48 
To: <[email protected]>
Reply-To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [ercoupe-tech] Re: mechanical research [was re: fuel pump bolt tor 
que]

First let me say that I own and fly an Ercoupe.  I have been a lawyer for 50
years.  Although I am still licensed to practice, I am now basically
retired.  I don't have some big pile of money that I got by exploiting or
stealing from other people or by pursuing spurious, non meritorious lawsuits
so as to harass or just to extort money out of people because of my own
greed.

 

I also served my country.  I was a jet fighter pilot in the U.S. Air Force
and retired out of the Reserves at the rank of Lt. Col.  I'm a 80 year old
widower and live in a 1,000 sq. foot condominium unit on Social Security and
a small Air Force pension just like most other elderly do.  I consider
myself lucky that I can barely afford to own, maintain and occasionally fly
my Ercoupe.

 

Now I can laugh at a good lawyer joke just as well as the next guy, but I
notice people are quick (but usually not quick enough) to seek out a lawyer
when they are in some sort of personal, financial, or legal jeopardy.  I do
acknowledge that there are some lawyers who engage in sharp practice, and/or
whose ethics are at best, questionable.  

 

Yes, anyone with the price of a lawsuit can sue anyone for anything but in
most, if not all states a lawyer who should have known his/her lawsuit had
no merit can be fined in money damages and sanctioned with other penalties
and costs.  In some state, the loser pays all. 

 

I hasten to say that I have not read all of the string of comments being
made about the feared legal liability for sharing, or perhaps placing for
sale in commerce this so called "contra-band" or fear about possible
"criminal" penalties for copyright infringement, fraudulent registration,
fraudulent claims, or misuse of copyright, perhaps trademark or patent
infringement.

 

One more thing I should mention: Copyright, Trademark and Patent law is not
my area of expertise.  That said, I'm trying to ascertain precisely what
this material is that everyone is talking about. Is it the index that
William R. Bayne has compiled over a number of years, it being his own work
product to reference various source materials, manuals, AD's, etc., that
would be beneficial for other members of the Forum to share?

 

If he intends to sell his index; i. e., place it in interstate commerce and
it is entirely his own work product in my opinion he can copyright it
himself without legal exposure even though it might make reference to
documents that are themselves copyrighted or already in the public domain.
If he intends to quote verbatim material authored and copyrighted by others
he may need their permission and have to include that permission by
reference to the copyrighted source. His own copyright will be protected as
long as this index is his own creation and he is therefore the first to put
it into commerce.

 

Certainly he would be wise to get advice from a patent lawyer on the
subject.  But, as far as Ercoupe owners who are lawyer predators who are by
the way probably going to benefit by being able to share the information
compiled by him just waiting to pounce on their fellow Ercoupe owners with
frivolous lawsuits, please give me a break! 

 
 -----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of William R. Bayne
Sent: Monday, September 06, 2010 5:32 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [ercoupe-tech] Re: mechanical research [was re: fuel pump bolt
tor que]


  




All, 

I think Dave carefully read my concern(s) and had a bit of fun with "tongue
in cheek".  The "legal perspective" of almost anything is one or more
"bubbles off" from the world in which most of us live.  

Unfortunately, Dave is 100% right when he cautions any and all to "look down
the road" in neighborhoods would likely not choose to travel lest we be
dragged down an alley and assaulted.  I welcome his comments and am
attempting give each due consideration.

Human beings tend to generally separate into two "camps".  By far the
largest is those who focus on what can't be done.  The distinct minority are
those who pay only sufficient attention to how something can't be done so as
to avoid the potholes that have adversely affected others whose common goal
is one or more ways it CAN be done (and preferably at some profit at some
stage by someone).

I believe I can gather and publish with minimum risk a Personal Ercoupe
Technical Bibliography (Annotated).  This would be, by definition, my
personal index of subjects cross-referenced to sources that, in my sole
opinion, constitute the best information available of use to those who own
and/or maintain Ercoupe, Forney and Alon aircraft.  It would be clearly
identified as the product of a layman NOT professionally trained or
certified in aviation maintenance in any specialty other than by dedicated
and reasonably thorough reading.  

Accordingly, I should not be "accountable" to any professional standard as
to the perfection or completeness of my personal observations, offered
exclusively (as a "premium", like the cups, T-shirts, CDs and DVDs on Public
Television) to those willing to contribute at a certain "level" (or more) to
the ongoing operational expenses of the Texas Ercoupe Museum, soon to be
incorporated as a 501(c)(3) educational non-profit organization.  Several
years ago I attempted to set up a committee that might perpetuate such
efforts (I just turned seventy).  From that experience I can personally
confirm that such a committee becomes a cul-de-sac into which good ideas are
diverted and then quietly strangled by competing egos.

The Ercoupe Parts Manual, Service Manual and Bulletins and Memoranda are
generally information that has been available publicly before 1950 and
respective copyrights of this early material not timely renewed by the
succession of owners.  That is how one can buy the original versions from
Wag-Aero and Essco, among other sources.  CAA/FAA publications would seem to
be in the public domain being a work product represented and disseminated in
the public interest by persons whose salaries are paid by all taxpayers.

As to individual Service Bulletins, etc., Manuals and the like from Forney,
Alon and Mooney, it is my understanding that facts cannot be copyrighted.
Only a specific presentation is subject to copyright.  All "FAA Approved
Flight Manuals" are similar (for clarity) between aircraft and manufacturers
(just as are, today, certain instrument and control layouts).  Such
publications are, by definition educational in nature.  The "educational
exemption" to strict author's rights of reproduction would seem appropriate
for any judge and/or jury to accord any good-faith attempt at wider and
clearer dissemination of information important to the safe operation of
aircraft (whether specific or or in general).  

Such efforts, so long as they are not hopelessly incompetent or motivated by
personal greed, should improve the preexisting level of compliance with
authoritative maintenance and operational information sources.  It would
seem appropriate to claim such publication (clearly credited as to source)
could reasonably be expected to improve the awareness of both owners and
mechanics such that "safety of flight" is increased in the overall.  I
would, therefore, expect such publication to be deemed more "in the public
interest" than any author's rights as would pertain to brief references to
and from a given original publication.

At the end of the day, the Texas Ercoupe Museum will never have the "deep
pockets" to attract the professional attention of an ambitious attorney  ;<)

Regards,

William R. Bayne
.____|-(o)-}____.
(Copyright 2010)

-- 


On Sep 6, 2010, at 11:47, Ed Burkhead wrote:





David,

Correct me if I'm wrong, please.

I think it is safe to publish an index saying WHERE to find information
provided that you write it in your own words.  Would this not be legal and
safe?

What is the legality of posting an actual copy of public government
documents, i.e. TCDS A-787?

Ed











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