Category Archives: Sound Recordings

CO extends deadline for comments on federalizing protection of pre-1972 recordings

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Filed under Copyright Office, Sound Recordings

As per the CO’s press release:

The Copyright Office is extending the time in which comments and reply comments can be filed in response to its Notice of Inquiry requesting public input on the desirability and means of bringing sound recordings fixed before February 15, 1972, under federal jurisdiction. Initial comments must be received in the Office of the General Counsel of the Copyright Office no later than January 31, 2011. Reply comments must be received no later than March 2, 2011. The Office prefers that comments be submitted electronically via the Copyright Office website. For further information, go to the Copyright Office website at www.copyright.gov. (Read More)

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High Court of England and Wales denies appeal of tariffs set by Copyright Board

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Filed under Copyright Royalty Board, Music, Royalty Collection Societies, Sound Recordings, UK

Phonographic Performance Ltd v British Hospitality Association & Ors [2009] EWHC 209 (Ch) (12 February 2010)

Last Friday, the High Court (Arnold, J.) denied an appeal of a decision by the Copyright Tribunal brought by the performance rights society, Phonographic Performance Limited. The Copyright Tribunal had found that the tariffs PPL accessed for the public performance of sound recordings in (i) public houses, bars, restaurants ad cafes, (ii) shops and stores, and (iii) factories and offices were unreasonable.

To briefly review, the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1998 provided that the public performance of a broadcast to an audience who had not paid for admission did not infringe any sound recording. PPL had previously claimed that the exception violated violated Article 8(2) of Council Directive 92/100/EC of 19 November 1992. Phonographic Performance Ltd v Department of Trade and Industry [2004] EWHC 1795 (Ch), [2004] EMLR 30).

The Government exercised its powers under section 2 of the European Communities Act 1972 to implement Article 11(1)(b) of European Parliament and Council Directive 2001/29/EC of 22 May 2001, by means of regulation 21(1) of the Copyright and Related Rights Regulations 2003, SI 2003/2498. The practical effect of the amendment was that many establishments needed to obtain a license to publicly perform sound recordings that they had previously played for free.

In December 2004, PPL noted its new tariffs, which came into full effect in 2006, to the Department of State. The new tariffs, in addition to creating a “delivery system neutral fee” also changed the rates accessed to performers of sound recordings under the existing structures. The changes in tariffs were referred to the Copyright Tribunal by the Secretary of State in October 2005 for a determination as to whether they were reasonable.

The Copyright Tribunal issued a final decision on October 15, 2009 finding that the tariffs were not reasonable, and made an order under Section 128 B(3)(a) changing the tariffs. The Tribunal reinstated the previous tariffs, extended them to all means of delivery, but with (i) an increase in the tariffs payable by 10% in addition to an adjustment in line with the Retail Price Index and (ii) the imposition of a concessionary discount rate for some small users.

Ground A: the investigatory obligations of the Copyright Tribunal

The argument that Copyright Tribunal was under an obligation to investigate the reasonableness of the tariffs was central to a number of PPL’s arguments on appeal. The Court found that while the Tribunal’s role under 128B was inquisitorial and not adversarial, it did not have an obligation to investigate. The Tribunal, according to the Court, only had to take into account the relevant considerations, and it’s obligations were fulfilled by considering the record and parties’ briefings.

Grounds B & C: the Performance Rights Society tariffs and previous tariffs as best competitor

PPL’s second and third grounds for appeal were that the Tribunal should have used the tariffs used by the Performance Rights Society, the tariff collection society for righsholders of musical works,  and not the previous tariff rates as “best competitor.”  The Court found that the Tribunal did not make an error of law by taking into consideration the PRS tariffs, and only finding that they suggested a modest increase in PLL’s tariffs; and that the Tribunal did not make an error in considering the previous tariff rates as best competitor.

Ground D: market reaction

PPL argued that the Tribunal failed to take into account the increase in numbers of licensees (81,921 in 2005 to 105,981 in 2008), as an indicator of the reasonableness of the tariffs. In opposition, the Interested Parties claimed that the increase was due to the removal of the exceptions under Section 72, which required more users to acquire a license. The Court found that the Tribunal should have directly addressed the argument, but that the reasoning used by the Tribunal showed that it did not consider the increase in numbers to be indicative of reasonableness.

Ground E: measurement of audience

PPL argued that the Tribunal committed material error by not considering that the new tariffs accounted for the size of a venue, where the old tariffs did not.  The Court found that this may show that the new tariffs are more reasonable than the old tariffs, but not that the Tribunal made an error in concluding that the new tariffs were unreasonable.

Ground F: the statutory factors

The statutory factors for which the Tribunal must consider when evaluating a tariff, set forth in section 128A(7), include “(c) [the] commercial benefit a potential licensee is likely to obtain from playing the excepted sound recordings.” PPL contended that the Tribunal did not adequately consider the factor. The Court found that the Tribunal  made the conclusion, which was in its discretion, that the factor did not support an increase, except to the extent that the new tariffs covered PPL’s new rights in the broadcast of sound recordings.

Ground G: the concessionary discount

PPL argued that Tribunal made an error by imposing the concessionary discount. The Court found that the Tribunal was within its discretion in finding that the concessionary discount was reasonable to balance the increase of 10% it granted on top of the old tariffs.

Costs

PPL also appealed the decision of the Tribunal to order it to pay half the costs of the Reference.  PPL contended that the costs order “did not reflect the inquisitorial nature of the Tribunal’s jurisdiction under [S]ection 128B.” The Court affirmed the order, finding that the awarding of costs “was within the ambit of [the Tribunal's] jurisdiction.”

International Copyright Representation

Bombay High Court: Authority to grant compulsory licenses exclusively vested with Copyright Board

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Filed under Compulsory License, Copyright Royalty Board, India, Music, Royalty Collection Societies, Sound Recordings

Music Choice India Private Limited v. Phonographic Performance Limited, Appeal No. 150 of 2009 in Suit No. 2124 of 2007 (High Court at Bombay 2010)

Music Choice India wanted to launch a 24 hour music channel in India that would only play music and static graphics. The broadcaster entered into negotiations with Phonographic Performance, a royalty collection society, for the necessary rights. The negotiations stalled (with Music Choice offering 4-7% of prorated net profits and Phonographic Performance demanding 50% of end user price), and in March 2007 Music Choice filed an application for a compulsory license under section 31(1)(b) of the Indian Copyright Act to the Copyright Board at New Dehli.

It can take over two years for the Copyright Board to rule on an application. So in August 2007, Music Choice also filed suit in a trial court in Bombay seeking, inter alia, a declaratory judgment that it had a license to begin broadcasting immediately on the condition that it pay the compulsory royalty rate set by the Copyright Board, when the Board was able to rule on its application; or in the alternative, that the Court allow for it to pay the 4-7% of prorated net profits it proposed in negotiations or another amount set by the court until the Board had a chance to rule on its application. The trial court dismissed for lack of jurisdiction.

On appeal, the Bombay High Court affirmed, holding that the district court did not have jurisdiction to hear the suit. The High Court found that, although it could hear appeals from the Copyright Board on compulsory license applications, it did not have jurisdiction to hear a similar suit brought from a Bombay trial court. Section 9 of the Code of Civil Procedure states that “[c]ourts shall have jurisdiction to try all suits of civil nature excepting suits of which cognizance is either expressly or impliedly barred.” The Bombay High Court found that the legislation enabling the compulsory licensing regime was a special statute and a self-sufficient piece of legislation, which barred general civil trial courts from hearing applications.

(h/t Prashant Reddy at Spicy IP)

International Copyright Representation