Duck and Cover reports Bethesda filed a motion in limine against Interplay. Only one segment is quoted, and it seems to indicate Bethesda is asking for Interplay to be forced to prove that the TLA is a copyright/trademark license (going back to the "Fallout name only" claim Bethesda made) and - quite reasonably - that Interplay bears the burden of proof that they have the required funding and have commenced full-scale development. So far so good, that makes sense. But to confuse the issue, the filing then offers three points that seem to state that - despite having the burden of proof - Interplay should be precluded from offering evidence or arguments on said claims. Maybe my legalese is breaking down, but I don't see how this filing makes any sense.<blockquote>For the reasons set forth in the accompanying memorandum, Bethesda moves the Court for an order:
(1) Holding that Defendant/Counter-Plaintiff Interplay Entertainment Corp. (“Interplay”) bears the burden of proof at trial on each of the following issues: (a) that Interplay has a trademark and copyright license; (b) that Interplay had commenced “full-scale development of its FALLOUT MMOG” by April 4, 2009 as set forth in Section 2.3 of the Trademark License Agreement entered into by Bethesda and Interplay on April 4, 2007 (the “TLA”); and (c) that Interplay had “secured financing for the FALLOUT MMOG in an amount no less than US$30,000,000.00” by April 4, 2009 as set forth in Section 2.3 of the TLA;
(2) Precluding Interplay from offering parol evidence to support its defense that the TLA granted Interplay a copyright license;
(3) Precluding Interplay from arguing at trial that it had satisfied the “full-scale development” and “Minimum Financing” requirements set forth in Section 2.3 of the TLA by April 4, 2009; and
(4) Precluding Interplay from amending its pleadings to assert the affirmative defense of mistake.</blockquote>Note we don't have the full document so this is just going from a fragment of the filing, but from this quote this is a farcical filing from Bethesda. That would be nothing new.
EDIT: good commentary here, noting it is normal for this kind of filing to be partially rather than fully granted, and noting the only real head-scratcher in this filing is the third point.
(1) Holding that Defendant/Counter-Plaintiff Interplay Entertainment Corp. (“Interplay”) bears the burden of proof at trial on each of the following issues: (a) that Interplay has a trademark and copyright license; (b) that Interplay had commenced “full-scale development of its FALLOUT MMOG” by April 4, 2009 as set forth in Section 2.3 of the Trademark License Agreement entered into by Bethesda and Interplay on April 4, 2007 (the “TLA”); and (c) that Interplay had “secured financing for the FALLOUT MMOG in an amount no less than US$30,000,000.00” by April 4, 2009 as set forth in Section 2.3 of the TLA;
(2) Precluding Interplay from offering parol evidence to support its defense that the TLA granted Interplay a copyright license;
(3) Precluding Interplay from arguing at trial that it had satisfied the “full-scale development” and “Minimum Financing” requirements set forth in Section 2.3 of the TLA by April 4, 2009; and
(4) Precluding Interplay from amending its pleadings to assert the affirmative defense of mistake.</blockquote>Note we don't have the full document so this is just going from a fragment of the filing, but from this quote this is a farcical filing from Bethesda. That would be nothing new.
EDIT: good commentary here, noting it is normal for this kind of filing to be partially rather than fully granted, and noting the only real head-scratcher in this filing is the third point.