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Communication to the public: yes or no? Merpel can't say without investigating in person |
There are times when even a copyright-loving Kat may miss a copyright
case, not necessarily because she is having fun relaxing at a spa, as is
instead the background at the origin of another reference to the Court
of Justice of the European Union (CJEU). So, katpat to the one and only
IPKat Jeremy for telling everything about Case C-351/12 Ochranný svaz autorský pro práva k
dílům hudebním, o.s. (OSA) v Léčebné lázně Mariánské Lázně a. s. [more handily: OSA], a reference for a preliminary ruling
from the Krajský soud v Plzni (Czech
Republic) concerning the ever-exciting right of communication to the public,
effect of badly-implemented directives, and collective rights management. Most importantly,
this is a case in relation to which Advocate General Eleanor Sharpston
delivered her Opinion on 14 November
last.
But what is this mysterious (at least to this Kat) reference all about?
As neatly summarised by the AG, radio and TV
sets in the bedrooms of a residential [and very
nice: see here] health spa establishment in the Czech Republic
give access to broadcast works [Merpel
suspects that this Czech spa may not be the only one].
Under Directive 2001/29, holders of copyright in such
works have the exclusive right to authorise their communication to the public
pursuant to Article 3(1) of this directive and may claim fees for doing
so.
OSA, a copyright collecting society with
exclusive rights to enter into licence agreements and collect fees on behalf of
authors of musical works in the Czech Republic, claims fees for such
communication to the public by the establishment in question.
The establishment objects both that the service
in question is not communication to the public and that the Czech collecting
society’s territorial monopoly infringes the establishment’s right, derived
from EU provisions on freedom to provide services, to enter into a licence
agreement with a collecting society in another Member State – a problem which,
it claims, is exacerbated by the Czech society’s abuse of its national dominant
position by charging excessive fees.
The Regional Court of Pilsen wishes to know:
1) whether the service in question
constitutes communication to the public within the meaning of Directive
2001/29;
2) whether the relevant provisions of
that directive are sufficiently precise and unconditional to be relied upon in
a dispute between individuals; and
3) whether EU law precludes a Member
State from according a single collecting society exclusive rights within its
territory.
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Still investigating: Merpel can't really decide |
1) Is a spa more akin to a hotel or a dentist
waiting room?
According to the AG, this question has an easy
answer: a spa establishment resembles more a hotel room than a dentist
waiting room:
"Spa establishments typically have a broader and less determinate
clientele than dentists (and counsel for the Spa described it at the hearing as
possibly the largest such establishment in Europe); the availability of access
to television and radio broadcasts in bedrooms may well influence a patient’s
choice of establishment; and in that regard the availability of choice is
likely to be significant.
Moreover, the television and radio sets are in
residents’ bedrooms. They are used in the context of enjoyment of the
accommodation facilities offered by the Spa, not of its health care treatment.
Such a situation is clearly analogous to that of the hotel guests in SGAE."
From these considerations descends that the
provision of television and radio sets in bedrooms in a spa establishment,
together with the relevant signal enabling broadcasts to be heard or viewed,
must fall within the concept of communication to the public in Article 3(1) of
Directive 2001/29.
Of course, Article(5)(2)(e) [exception
or limitation in favour of social institutions pursuing non-commercial
purposes, such as hospitals or prisons] would
not apply in that this provision is concerned with the right of reproduction,
nor would Article 5(3)(b) [exception or limitation for the
benefit of people with a disability] of the directive. The latter, in fact, concerns communications to the
public which are directly related to the disability and are of a
non-commercial nature, while in this case suggests there is no relationship between
the availability of television and radio sets in spa bedrooms and any specific
disability from which patients may suffer.
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Still thinking: It will take an extra week (minimum) at the spa before Merpel can reach a conclusion |
2) Are the relevant provisions of Directive
2001/29 sufficiently unconditional and precise for collecting societies to rely
on them before national courts if a certain Member State has failed to
implement it correctly?
According to the AG, the answer must be in the affirmative:
"[W]hen national courts apply
domestic law, they are bound to interpret it, so far as possible, in the light
of the wording and purpose of any relevant directive, in order to achieve the
result sought by the directive. That obligation is inherent in the system of the
Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union. It enables those courts to
ensure the full effectiveness of EU law when they determine disputes within
their jurisdiction ... If a Member State has failed to implement Directive
2001/29 correctly, a national court hearing a claim for copyright fees against
an individual must interpret its domestic law, so far as possible, in the light
of the wording and purpose of that directive, in order to achieve the result
sought by it."
3) Can a Member State reserve the exercise of
collective copyright management to a single collecting society?
Again, the answer should be in the affirmative
according to AG Sharpston. Although this creates a territorial monopoly
which deprives recipients of services of the freedom to choose a collecting
society in another Member State, this is neither a violation of the
freedom to provide services nor tantamount to a violation of Article 102 TFEU [abuse of a dominant position].
This Kat wonders whether the conclusion of the AG
might be have been influenced to some extent by the recent decision of the
General Court [not cited in the Opinion] in Case
T-422/08 CISAC (here), in which it was recalled – among other things – that the structures
used for traditional forms collective rights management and related national
territorial limitations are not usually considered by the Commission to
constitute an infringement of competition rules.
But will the Court follow its AG’s Opinion? Just wait and see.
By describing what spa establishments are typically is not the A-G deciding questions of fact? Perhaps the one thing which the CJEU has no right or jurisdiction to do in references. I wish they would not do this - it just leads to muddle when the reference gets back with the (by now very common) feature that both sides think that they have won.
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