Key Takeaway: A federal district court dismissed a copyright infringement claim on the grounds that the work in the asserted registration had been improperly classified under the Copyright Act. This case demonstrates that correct classification at the copyright application stage is critical to the enforceability of the registration.
David Glover and Design Gaps, LLC (“Design Gaps”) design custom cabinetry. In the course of their business, they provided cabinet designs to DD Luxe Design, LLC, and related parties (“DD Luxe”) for use in residential construction with the understanding that they would be compensated if the designs were used. Design Gaps later obtained a federal copyright registration for the designs, in which they were identified as “architectural works.” According to Design Gaps, DD Luxe subsequently represented that the house construction was on hold for the foreseeable future. Design Gaps alleged that this was untrue and that construction continued, using its cabinet designs without authorization.
Design Gaps then filed a lawsuit in the United States District Court for the Western District of North Carolina alleging, among other claims, a federal copyright infringement claim. DD Luxe filed a motion to dismiss, arguing that the cabinet designs were not properly classified as “architectural works” and, as a result, the asserted registration could not support an infringement claim.
The court granted the motion to dismiss, holding that Design Gaps had failed to establish the validity of the “architectural works” copyright on which its federal claim depended. To maintain a copyright infringement claim, the plaintiff must own a valid copyright registration covering the allegedly infringed work. When registering a copyright, an applicant must identify the type of work being registered, which determines the applicable standards for registrability. Although “architectural works” are a recognized category of copyrightable works, the Copyright Act narrowly defines such works as “the design of a building,” and implementing regulations further clarify that “buildings” are “humanly habitable structures that are intended to be both permanent and stationary.”
Applying these definitions, the court concluded that cabinets do not qualify as buildings under the controlling statutory and regulatory definition. Thus, Design Gaps’ cabinets did not qualify as “architectural works.” The court noted that the cabinets might have been registrable under another category, such as pictorial, graphic, or sculptural works. However, because the only copyright registration in the complaint was classified as “architectural works,” the court held that the registration did not validly cover the work as claimed. Without a valid registration supporting the claim, the infringement cause of action could not proceed. The court therefore dismissed the federal copyright claim and declined to exercise jurisdiction over the remaining state law claims.
This case highlights a frequently overlooked but critical issue in copyright practice: correct classification of the work at the time of application. While an average consumer might view cabinetry as part of a home’s “architecture” the terms “architectural works” and other copyright classifications are governed by distinct definitions within the Copyright Act and relevant federal regulations. These definitions, while seemingly mundane, can be outcome-determinative. Here, the misclassification by Design Gaps prevented it from maintaining a federal infringement claim altogether. While some definitional inconsistencies may be less severe than here, enforcement of a copyright registration can hinge on getting the details right at the registration stage. This case serves as a reminder for companies to:
- carefully evaluate the appropriate category of authorship prior to filing an application;
- confirm that the selected classification aligns with statutory and regulatory definitions; and
- treat registration as a substantive legal step, not merely an administrative formality.
The District Court’s full decision can be read here.