Martin D. Katz

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Partner  

Marty Katz is a partner based in the firm's Century City office. He is also co-chair of the firm's Entertainment and Media Industry Team, with oversight responsibility for entertainment litigation.

Areas of Practice

Mr. Katz's entertainment background includes representation of studios, independent producers, post-production facilities and broadcasting companies in connection with various types of claims, including those relating to participation accounting, copyright and idea submission, motion picture and television distribution rights, interactive rights and gaming licenses, disputes with talent, executive compensation disputes, employee misconduct, vertical integration, wrongful death and a host of insurance coverage issues unique to the entertainment industry.

Mr. Katz's insurance coverage background also includes the handling of complex coverage disputes on behalf of policyholders concerning mass tort claims; product liability claims; environmental liabilities; construction defect claims; earthquake, natural disaster and other catastrophic losses; fidelity losses and other employment-related claims; aviation and aerospace claims; and insurance company bad faith, as well as risk management consulting for policyholders. Mr. Katz has extensive experience in connection with insurance placed in the London Market and has served on Creditors Committees for various insolvent London Market companies.

Mr. Katz also has substantial trial, arbitration and appellate experience. For example, during the past five years, Mr. Katz has served as lead trial counsel in four complex arbitrations, a sixteen week jury trial, and three bench trials. He has also briefed and argued nine appeals decided during the past five years.

Education

  • J.D., University of Michigan, 1983, cum laude
  • B.A., Northwestern University, 1980, Phi Beta Kappa

Admissions

  • California
  • 8th Circuit
  • 9th Circuit
  • 11th Circuit

Representative Matters

Mr. Katz served as lead counsel, and has argued two interlocutory appeals, in the matter giving rise to the landmark decision in the entertainment field, Wolf v. Superior Court, 106 Cal. App. 4th 625 (2003).  In that case, the Court of Appeal held that the duty of a studio to account to a profit or revenue participant does not give rise to a fiduciary duty. This case ended the primary exposure for punitive damages that institutional players in the entertainment industry faced for nearly four decades. Mr. Katz tried the remainder of the case before a jury for sixteen weeks in 2005.

Mr. Katz argued the appeal in Corwin v. The Walt Disney Company, 475 F.3d 1239 (11 Cir. 2007). This was a copyright case, in which the plaintiff claimed that the Epcot theme park, as built, infringed a painting allegedly shown to Disney in the 1960s. The Eleventh Circuit upheld the district court's decision granting summary judgment in favor of Walt Disney World Co., based on the application of the extrinsic test for assessing claimed similarities, and the doctrine of independent creation.

Mr. Katz was lead counsel, and argued the appeal, in Robert Wagner v. Columbia Pictures Industries, Inc., 146 Cal. App. 4th 586 (2007). In that case, the Court of Appeal upheld the trial court's order granting summary judgment in favor of Columbia Pictures, rejecting Wagner's argument that theatrical motion picture rights are "subsidiary rights" of the right to exploit a television series.

Mr. Katz was also lead counsel in the matter giving rise to the decision in Martin Marietta Corp. v. Insurance Co. of North America , 40 Cal. App. 4th 1113 (1995), in which the Court of Appeal broadly interpreted the "personal injury" coverage of a CGL insurance policy. He was an integral member of the trial and appellate team that culminated in the decision in Armstrong World Industries, Inc. v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co. , 45 Cal. App. 4th 1 (1996), following a fifteen month multi-phase trial, in which the Court of Appeal broadly interpreted the "occurrence" wording in CGL and umbrella insurance policies.

Other representative matters include claims arising from or involving:

Participation accounting and contract disputes involving writers, actors and other participants

Copyright infringement and idea submission claims involving motion pictures and theme parks

Disputes over basic cable distribution rights, focusing on rights of assignment and accounting issues

Disputes over merchandising rights and accounting issues involving cartoon characters

Disputes over "best efforts" and "reasonable good faith efforts" clauses

Disputes over interactive rights and gaming license guarantees

Performer walkout on the eve of principal photography resulting in the shut down of the production

Claims for breach of executive employment/compensation agreements

Disputes involving special effects and 3-D animation house

Disputes over rights to film library

Disputes involving sports memorabilia company

Disputes over long term output agreements with major foreign media companies

Disputes over producer final cut rights, movie ratings

Disputes over exploitation of movies, television series and merchandise by vertically integrated enterprises

Wrongful death claim arising out of the production and broadcast of a talk show

Insurance coverage disputes arising from errant broadcasters, performer injuries, force majeure events

Representative Clients

Mr. Katz's clients during the past five years have included the following companies, as well as certain of their affiliated entities:

  • Batjac Productions
  • Coleman Insurance Brokers
  • Compaq Computer Corporation
  • First Look Studios
  • Hewlett-Packard Company
  • IAC/InterActiveCorp
  • Lockheed Martin Corporation
  • Metro Goldwyn Mayer Inc.
  • Modern Video Film
  • Paramount Pictures Corporation
  • Sony Pictures Entertainment Inc.
  • The Walt Disney Company

Honors

  • California Lawyer Attorney of the Year (CLAY) Award, Entertainment, 2008
  • Profiled by Daily Variety in the 2007 Hollywood Law Impact Report. In addition to being recognized as a top entertainment attorney, the article covered Mr. Katz' recent "noteworthy" wins.
  • Power Lawyer, Entertainment Litigation, Hollywood Reporter, 2005, 2007
  • Best of the Bar, Entertainment and Media, Los Angeles Business Journal, 2007
  • Super Lawyer on repeated occasions, Los Angeles Magazine