My specific question is regarding statutory requirements placed on the Copyright Office for handling appeals. My attorney's assistant told me there is a statutory requirement that the C.O. respond to our appeal within a certain time. I am led to believe that the time limit is 8 or 9 months from the appeal filing date, by which time they must either reject the appeal or grant the registration. Furthermore, I was told that failing to respond within the statutory time limit required automatic registration of the appealed applications. This certainly seems logical to me, otherwise applications or appeals could moulder away indefinitely, without recourse.
So here are my specific questions:
1. Are there statutes in place that require the C.O. to respond to an appeal?
2. Is there a statute that limits the time for the C.O. to respond to an appeal?
3. What is the statutory time limit for the C.O. to respond to an appeal?
4. What are the consequences if the C.O. fails to respond within the time limit?
5. What legal remedies or rights does the appellant have when the C.O. fails to respond?
6. What can be done to compel the C.O. to respond?
I want to write to my Representatives in Congress to ask them to look into this matter. But before I do, I want to have all of the facts at hand so I can inform them of any statutory requirements the C.O. has not met. According to my attorney's assistant, the C.O. has reportedly admitted two-fold negligence on their part by failing to respond. But that was 10 months ago, already past the supposed deadline, and we still have not received any response to our appeal. Surely the appellant has rights in this matter, I just need to know what they are. It has been over FOUR years since these applications were submitted, 18 months since the appeal was filed, certainly long enough for action by the C.O.
I have been asking my attorney (a high-priced, well known NYC law firm) for months for an update and he keeps saying there is nothing new, or the C.O. is not responding to him. I'm beginning to wonder if this is really the C.O. that is stalling, or if my attorney has made some technical errors and is trying to hide behind a red-herring. For the present, I'm assuming it is the C.O. and therefore I would like to write my Representatives in Congress.
Any help on this would be greatly appreciated.