An IP enthusiast fully dressed-up to celebrate World IP Day |
For this year's celebrations
WIPO decided to remember all those 'visionary
innovators' who contributed to the progress of humanity, and also contributed to the creation of valuable IP-protected materials.
The Court of Justice managed to celebrate World IP Day in more style than WIPO by publishing another of its many
recent copyright judgments (just to have an idea of the numbers, see the
data provided by Head of Unit - Copyright, DG Internal Market & Services
Maria Martin-Prat here).
Case
C-510/10 DR and TV2 Danmark A/S v NCB - Nordisk Copyright Bureau (on
which see the post
Jeremy published yesterday on the IPKat) was a reference from Danish Østre Landsret (Eastern Regional Court).
Danish courts appear to have a
fascination with the InfoSoc
Directive, and they are very keen on
having its many obscure meanings somehow clarified by the CJEU, as happened
(indeed ...) with Infopaq,
which was a reference from Danish Højesteret.
The reference in Case C-510/10
concerned the interpretation of Article 5(2)(d) of and recital 41 in the preamble to the InfoSoc Directive, which
provide for an exception to the exclusive reproduction right of the author in
his work ‘in respect of ephemeral recordings of works made by
broadcasting organisations by means of their own facilities and for their own
broadcasts’.
The proceedings pending before
the Danish court are between, on the one hand, broadcasting organisations DR
and TV2 Danmark A/S and, on the other hand, copyright management company NCB –
Nordisk. They concern recordings made in connection with TV programmes
commissioned from a third party by those broadcasting organisations for use in
their own transmissions.
To make long story short, the
dispute was whether the exception for ephemeral recordings also covers
recordings made by legally independent external TV production companies
in cases where those recordings have been commissioned from them by DR or by
TV2 Danmark for initial broadcast on DR or TV2 Danmark.
The questions which the Østre Landsret decided to refer to the CJEU were three.
EU copyright provisions shall
be given an EU-wide meaning
The first question concerned
whether the term ‘by means of their own
facilities’ in Article 5(2)(d) of the InfoSoc Directive, as
clarified by recital 41 in the preamble to that directive, is to be interpreted
with reference to national law or to EU law.
EU meaning, or non-EU meaning - that is the question |
The CJEU answered the question
by referring to Article 2 in that directive, according to which Member States
are, in principle, to grant to authors the exclusive right to authorise or
prohibit direct or indirect, temporary or permanent, reproduction by any means
and in any form, in whole or in part, of their works. However, pursuant to
Article 5(2)(d), Member States may provide for an exception or limitation to
the author’s exclusive reproduction right in his work in respect
of ephemeral recordings of works made by broadcasting organisations ‘by means of their own facilities’ and for their own broadcasts. This proviso, recalled
the Court, was directly inspired by that of Article
11bis(3) of the Berne Convention. The EU, although not a party to such
Convention, is nevertheless obliged, under Article
1(4) of the WIPO Copyright Treaty (to which it is a party) to comply with
the provisions in the Berne Convention.
As Article 11bis(3) of Berne
expressly states that it is a matter for legislation in the countries of the
Berne Union to determine the regulations for ephemeral recordings made by a
broadcasting organisation by means of its own facilities and used for its own
broadcasts, by adopting a specific exception for ephemeral recordings in the
InfoSoc Directive, the EU exercised the competence previously devolved on the
Member States in the field of IP.
Therefore, in line with its
earlier decison in Luksan,
the CJEU held that the EU must be regarded as having taken the place of the
Member States, which are no longer competent to implement the relevant
stipulations of the Berne Convention.
The need for a uniform
application of EU law and the principle of equality are such that the terms of a
provision of EU law (which makes no express reference to the law of the Member
States for the purpose of determining its meaning and scope) must normally be
given an independent and uniform interpretation throughout the EU.
This said, the expression ‘by means of its own facilities’ must be regarded, for the
purposes of applying that directive, as covering an autonomous concept of EU
law, which must be interpreted in a uniform manner throughout the EU.
Alternative or cumulative
conditions in Article 5(2)(d)? Alternative, also on account of the Charter,
says the Court
By its second question, the
Danish court asked subtly whether Article 5(2)(d) of the InfoSoc is to be
interpreted as meaning that a broadcasting organisation’s own facilities include the facilities of a person acting ‘on behalf of and under the responsibility of
the broadcasting organisation’or as meaning that a
broadcasting organisation’s own facilities include the
facilities of a person acting ‘on behalf of or under
the responsibility of the broadcasting organisation’.
Having said that there is a
divergence between the different language versions of recital 41 in the
preamble to the InfoSoc Directive, the CJEU held that the term ‘own facilities’ includes the facilities of a person acting on behalf of and/or under the
responsibility of the broadcasting organisation. Therefore, that provision does
not require the ephemeral recordings to be made by the broadcasting
organisation itself, but states that, if a third party makes those recordings,
the latter are deemed to have been made with the ‘own facilities’ of the broadcasting
organisation.
Nothing ephemeral in his recordings |
How to ascertain the ephemeral
nature of a recording?
By its third question, the
Danish court asked what the applicable criteria are for ascertaining whether a
recording made by a broadcasting organisation, for its own broadcasts, with the
facilities of a third party, is covered by the exception laid down in Article
5(2)(d) of the InfoSoc Directive in respect of ephemeral recordings.
The Court deemed it to be
crystal-clear that a recording is ephemeral if the person who makes it may be
regarded as acting either ‘on behalf of’ or ‘under the responsibility’ of the broadcasting organisation. Therefore, it is
necessary to determine (and this is up to national courts), first, whether the
third party in question may be regarded as acting ‘on behalf of’ the broadcasting
organisation. If the third party cannot be deemed to be acting ‘on behalf of’ the broadcasting
organisation, it will then be necessary to determine whether that third party
could be regarded, at the very least, as acting ‘under the responsibility’ of the broadcasting
organisation.
Dear Readers, could you think of any way to celebrate World IP Day which could be more amusing than a party of CJEU judges engaging in lively discussions as to whether the recordings they are listening to are ephemeral and, in any case, what is to be meant by ephemeral?
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