Last Thursday the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) gave judgment in
Joined Cases C-457/11 to C-460/11 Verwertungsgesellschaft Wort (VG Wort) v
Kyocera, Epson Deutschland GmbH, Xerox GmbH, Canon Deutschland GmbH and
Fujitsu Technology Solutions GmbH, Hewlett-Packard GmbH v VG Wort. Further comment and analysis will be forthcoming, but in the meantime we take the liberty of posting the content of a very helpful press release from Curia, which reads as follows:
The levy for the reproduction of protected works can be imposed on the sale of a
printer or a computer
Member States enjoy a broad discretion to determine who must pay that levy, the purpose of which
is to compensate authors for the reproduction of their work without their authorisation
According to EU law [that's Directive 2001/29/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 22 May 2001 on the harmonisation of certain
aspects of copyright and related rights in the information society (OJ 2001 L 167, p. 10)], Member States should grant, in principle, to authors and the holders of
related rights, the exclusive right to authorise or prohibit reproduction of their protected works or
other subject matter. However, Member States may provide for exceptions or limitations to that
exclusive right. Accordingly, they may permit, in particular (i) the making of private copies and (ii)
reproductions on paper or any similar medium, using any kind of photographic technique or by
some other process having similar effects. A Member State which avails itself of this option must,
however, provide that the copyright holders receive ‘fair compensation’ ['Fair compensation' is a difficult and elusive topic which this blog has frequently had cause to address: see posts here]. That compensation is to
compensate authors for the reproduction, without their authorisation, of their protected works.
The Bundesgerichtshof (Federal Court of Justice, Germany) is called on to give judgment in
proceedings concerning the fair compensation owed for the reproduction of protected works made
with the use of a chain of devices, including, in particular, a printer and a personal computer,
principally where the two are linked together. In those proceedings, VG Wort, the authorised
copyright collecting society representing authors and publishers of literary works in Germany,
requests that Canon, Epson, Fujitsu, Hewlett-Packard, Kyocera and Xerox be ordered to provide
information to it on the nature and quantity of printers that they have sold since 2001. In addition,
VG Wort claims that Kyocera, Epson and Xerox should be ordered to pay it remuneration by way
of a levy on personal computers, printers and/or plotters marketed in Germany between 2001 and
2007. In those circumstances, the Bundesgerichtshof has requested the Court of Justice to provide
it with an interpretation of the relevant provisions of EU law.
In today’s judgment, the Court of Justice, in response, states that the concept of ‘reproductions on
paper or any similar medium, effected by the use of any kind of photographic technique or by some
other process having similar effects’ includes reproductions made using a printer or a personal
computer where the two are linked together [Indeed, it would be difficult to imagine how the court could state otherwise]. In this case, it is open to the Member States to put in
place a system according to which the fair compensation is paid by the persons in possession of a
device contributing, in a non-autonomous manner, to that single reproduction process of the
protected work or other subject-matter on the given medium in so far as those persons have the
possibility to pass on the cost of the levy to their customers, provided that the overall amount of fair
compensation owed as recompense for the harm suffered by the author at the end of that single
process must not be substantially different from the fixed amount owed for the reproduction
obtained through the use of one single device [so the compensation depends on the fact of the copying, not the number of devices by which it is effected].
Moreover, the Court finds that an act by which a rightholder may have authorised reproduction of
his protected work or other subject-matter has no bearing on the fair compensation owed.
The Court states that, in addition, the non-application of the technological measures designed to
prevent or restrict unauthorised reproduction cannot have the effect that no fair compensation is
due for private copying. The application, by the rightholders, of such measures is voluntary.
Nevertheless, it is open to the Member State concerned to make the actual level of compensation
owed to rightholders dependent on whether or not such technological measures are applied, so
that those rightholders are encouraged to make use of them and thereby voluntarily contribute to
the proper application of the private copying exception [But should this mean that compensation is higher or lower when technological measures are used? Arguments can be constructed in favour of both propositions].
Lastly, the Court holds that the relevant legislation ‒ a directive which came into force on 22 June
2001 and which the Member States had to transpose into national law by 22 December 2002 at the
latest ‒ does not apply to the acts of using protected works or other subject-matter which took
place before that date.
Watch this space for further comments.
No comments:
Post a Comment