Supreme Court sides with Kirtsaeng on first sale defence

Managing IP is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Gardens, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2025

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Supreme Court sides with Kirtsaeng on first sale defence

The Supreme Court disagreed with amici such as AIPLA, IPO and the MPAA on Tuesday when it ruled that Supap Kirtsaeng could lawfully buy cheaper editions of textbooks overseas and then resell them in the US for a profit

The Court said in Kirtsaeng v Wiley & Sons that the first sale doctrine - which states that once a copyright owner sells a work, his rights in that work are exhausted - applies to copies manufactured outside of the United States with the publisher’s permission. The books at issue were manufactured by Wiley & Sons’ foreign subsidiary, Wiley Asia.

The decision has clarified what the US Copyright Act means by “lawfully made under this title”, but many copyright owners and practitioners will undoubtedly be unhappy with its interpretation.

While Wiley read “lawfully made under this title” to mean that the work must have been geo­graphically made in the US under US copyright law, Kirtsaeng argued that it simply meant ‘in accordance with’ or ‘in compliance with’ the Copyright Act, which would permit the doctrine to apply to copies manufactured abroad with the copyright owner’s permission”, wrote the Court.

AIPLA’s amicus brief argued that the first sale defence may not be raised, not because the books were made abroad, but because under the extraterritoriality doctrine the first sale right attaches only after the copyright owner has made its first sale in the United States.

Joshua Rosenkranz of Orrick Herrington & Sutcliffe argued for Kirtsaeng, while Theodore Olson of Gibson Dunn & Crutcher argued for Wiley.

more from across site and SHARED ros bottom lb

More from across our site

In our latest interview with women IP leaders, Catherine Bonner at Murgitroyd discusses technology, training, and teaching
Developments included an update in the VAR dispute between Ballinno and UEFA, the latest CMS updates, and a swathe of market moves
The LMG Life Sciences Americas Awards is thrilled to present the 2025 shortlist
A new order has brought the total security awarded to a Canadian tech company to $45 million, the highest-ever by an Indian court in an IP case
Andrew Blattman reflects on how IP practices have changed and shares his hopes for increased AI use and better performance on the stock market
The firm said major IP developments included advising on a ‘landmark’ deal involving green hydrogen production, as well as two major acquisitions
The appointments follow other recent moves in the European market as firms look to bolster their UPC offerings
Deborah Kirk discusses why IP and technology have become central pillars in transactions and explains why clients need practically minded lawyers
IP STARS, Managing IP’s accreditation title, reveals its latest rankings for patent work, including which firms are moving up
Leaders at US law firms explain what attorneys can learn from AI cases involving Meta and Anthropic, and why the outcomes could guide litigation strategies
Gift this article