Showing posts with label designs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label designs. Show all posts

Sunday, 3 April 2016

The Full Montis


At the end of last month the CJEU heard an interesting case which has been little reported to date. The case is C-169/15 Montis Design and was referred to the CJEU by the Benelux Gerechtshof.
Like all good referrals, the background to the case is complicated, as is the law which the CJEU has been asked to consider. I am grateful to the EU Law Radar website for their analysis of the case.
There are a number of 'pivot' points in the case, not least of which is the relationship between copyright and design right. For that reason, this article is rather more about the world of designs rights than is normally the case with the 1709 blog. But there is a stripe of copyright running through the centre.
The Montis Design case concerns a dining chair named Chaplin which was created by the Dutch designer Gerard van den Berg some time in the late 1980s, and the design was registered using the system set up by the Uniform Benelux Law on Designs and Models. Mr van den Berg then sold his rights to a Dutch furniture manufacturer, Montis Design, who made chairs to the Van den Berg design. However they failed to renew the registration when it became due in 1993, thus apparently leaving it open to other companies to manufacture chairs to the van den Berg design, which duly happened.
Montis then sued for infringement and the matter went as far as the Dutch Supreme Court which ruled, somewhat bizarrely, that the formalities set out in the Benelux Law on Designs were contrary to Article 5(2) of the Berne Convention on copyright. However the Supreme Court's finding did not mean that the Montis design right was re-activated. Montis Design returned to the fray in 2013, this time in the Benelux Gerechtshof, using the argument that since Article 17 of the EU Designs Directive 98/71/EC [1998] stated that a registered design "shall also be eligible for protection under the law of copyright", the Chaplin design was being infringed as a matter of copyright law. Article 17 is qualified by saying "The extent to which, and the conditions under which, such a protection is conferred, including the level of originality required, shall be determined by each Member State". However the Chaplin design had been created and registered before the Designs Directive came into force, and so it was argued, this provision did not have the effect of either reviving the lapsed design right or of retrospectively affording copyright protection to the design, because neither Dutch domestic law nor the Benelux Design Law implemented Article 17 retroactively.
The Gerechtshof examined this argument in the light of the CJEU's earlier decision in Flos. Flos (Jeremy posted a piece on this case here) had involved some similarity in that it concerned the design of a piece of furniture (a lamp) which had apparently entered the public domain (although in the Flos case the design had never been registered) under Italiy's Intellectual Property Code. The Second Chamber of the CJEU in that case had to consider whether the margin of appreciation afforded to member states by the sentence quoted above, would allow a country not provide the element of copyright protection at all. In other words does 'shall be eligible for' mean 'shall be given' or 'may be given'? The CJEU ruled that a member state could not exclude a registered design from also enjoying copyright protection. However being the CJEU, they had to say so in the most convoluted way possible:
1. Article 17 of Directive 98/71/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 13 October 1998 on the legal protection of designs must be interpreted as precluding legislation of a Member State which excludes from copyright protection in that Member State designs which were protected by a design right registered in or in respect of a Member State and which entered the public domain before the date of entry into force of that legislation, although they meet all the requirements to be eligible for copyright protection.
Despite the Flos ruling the Gerechtshof were still concerned about the retroactive aspect of Montis's argument invoking Article 17 of the Design Directive. For reasons that are not clear from the commentaries, the court felt it was necessary to seek clarification on whether Article 10 of the Copyright Term Directive 93/98/EEC meant that copyright might be revived in this case. This appears to arise because without the Article 17 provision, in some member states copyright will only subsist in a design if it meets some aesthetic criterion. I can find no mention in either of the Montis cases of it being argued that Mr van den Berg's design also met the originality criteria for copyright per se. A further clue to this lies in the wording of the second question of the referral shown below, which speaks about copyright in a work of applied art. From this I have to assume that perhaps Dutch copyright law (like the not-yet-repealed Section 52 of the Copyright Designs and Patents Act 1988) provides such works with a much shorter term than to other artistic works. Perhaps one of our readers can confirm this. The court's train of reasoning may have been: Art 17 only confers copyright protection on designs which have registered, but in the Montis case that registration had lapsed before Art 17 came into force therefore since it was not registered at the time, the design could not enjoy copyright protection.
Anyway the upshot was that in April 2015 the Benelux Gerechtshof referred the following questions to the CJEU:
1. Is the term of protection referred to in Article 10, in conjunction with Article 13(1), of Directive 93/98/EEC (the Term of Protection Directive) […] applicable to rights of copyright that were originally protected by national copyright law but which lapsed before 1 July 1995 on the ground that a formal condition had not been satisfied (in due time), more specifically because a maintenance declaration, as referred to in Article 21(3) of the Uniform Benelux Law on Designs and Models (old version), had not been filed (in due time)?
2. If the answer to Question 1 is in the affirmative:
Must the Term of Protection Directive be construed as precluding a rule of national legislation under which the copyright in a work of applied art that lapsed before 1 July 1995 on the ground that a formal condition had not been satisfied is deemed to have lapsed permanently?
If the answer to Question 2 is in the affirmative:
3. If, under national legislation, the copyright in question is to be considered to revive or to be revived at a certain time, from what date does such revival occur?
So far the Curia website does not indicate when we might expect to see the CJEU's decision.

Saturday, 11 July 2015

A Journey into the Interior


On 18 June 2015 the British Institute of Interior Design (BIID) awarded the well-known CEO of the campaigning organisation Anti-Copying In Design (ACID) Dids Macdonald OBE with a Fellowship. This was in recognition of her untiring work on behalf of the design industry over many years. Dids started out as an interior designer before moving on to product design.

Interesting though that factoid is, I barely gave it a thought at the time. Not until I came across a recent query about copyright and interior design posted on a forum, did I start to ponder the question: how exactly is interior design protected?

Copyright

We all know that architectural plans and works of architecture are explicitly covered by copyright, but that definition surely cannot be extended to include soft furnishings or wall coverings, which in no way constitute the fabric of the building in which they are installed. Admittedly, the patterns on fabrics and wall coverings (Designers Guild comes to mind) may well be protected by copyright (as artistic works) but that would not extend to the complete interior design scheme. The design drawings for an interior design would certainly qualify as artistic works assuming they evidenced sufficient originality - an easy hurdle to overcome. But does that mean that section 17(3) of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 would then apply to the finished room or interior space. Here's what the Act says:
(3) In relation to an artistic work copying includes the making of a copy in three dimensions of a two-dimensional work and the making of a copy in two dimensions of a three-dimensional work.
If that is interpreted too broadly, we could see a garden or most everyday objects becoming copyright works if they originate from a design drawing which itself is subject to copyright. This was an issue extensively explored by the House of Lords in British Leyland Motor Corp v Armstrong Patents Company Ltd [1986] albeit in the context of the 1956 Copyright Act. 
 
And what about works of artistic craftsmanship? We know from caselaw, for example Lucasfilm, Interlego and the much earlier 'Popeye' case (King Features Syndicate Inc. v. O & M Kleeman Ltd. [1941]) that for an object to be considered a work of artistic craftsmanship it must have a quality of art which the maker intended it to have, although the actual artistic quality itself is immaterial. Clearly an interior designer will go about fulfilling his or her commission in an artistic frame of mind, but can the assemblage of a number of items such as fabrics, wall coverings and soft furnishings, which have been designed and produced by someone else, really constitute artistic craftsmanship? In Shelley Films Ltd v Rex Features Ltd [1994], a film set was found to meet this criterion. But contrast that decision with Mr Justice Lloyd's obiter dicta in Creation Records in which he dismissed a collection of unrelated items as having the character of an artistic work. So does copyright really protect the totality of a design for an interior? And would the delayed repeal of section 52 CDPA make any difference? Probably not because that section applies to the making by an industrial process of articles derived from artistic works, which has little relevance to interior design.

Design Right

Design right came about specifically to deal with the sort of articles which, due to their practical or utilitarian nature and industrial form of manufacture, are ineligible for copyright protection. It is not really necessary to go into the detailed differences and quirks of UK registered and unregistered design right or the EU near-equivalent, community design right; suffice it to say that the legislation for all of these rights talks about articles and products as distinct physical entities, not as an assemblage of many items and features which may individually be subject to design right. The decoration and furnishing of a space is not analogous to a complex product made up of several components, like a Dyson vacuum cleaner. And furthermore design right only restricts the making of a similar product to substantially the same design, so it wouldn't, for instance, prevent an interior from being photographed and reproduced in Hello magazine. So does design right help interior designers protect their work? Possibly not.

What about Trade Mark Protection then

Surely I must be joking. Well no, not if you assume that Apple were serious with their application for trade mark registration for the interior layout of their Apple Stores, and which the Court of Justice of the European Union did not treat as a joke either. But this form of IP is hardly a practical solution in the everyday work of an interior designer.

Is there really an Issue here?

I imagine it matters to interior designers, and quite probably to Dids Macdonald and ACID too. But is there a need for additional legal clarity in this area? And if there is, in which area of IP law should the solution be found? There is a substantial difference between copyright with its lifetime plus 70 years worth of protection as compared to design right's maximum term of 25 years (and significantly shorter for the unregistered variety), not to mention the actual types of reproduction etc which are protected. It as hard to say how public policy might best be served. And how would such rights be enforced? If you are so taken with the decor in your local Nando's that you go home and reproduce their interior design in your living room, will anyone know or care?

Thursday, 30 October 2014

Designs, copyright and UK law reform post-Flos

A perplexed 1709 Blog-reader has written to us with the following request for clarification. If any reader(s) would like to respond by posting their comments below, our reader would be hugely gratified, though possibly no less perplexed.  The request runs as follows:
I understand that the CJEU’s decision in Case C-168/09 Flos is about pre-1989 designs that have copyright protection because they were protected according to the law of an EU member state at the relevant time. In response, the UK Government is proposing to repeal section 52 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 (CDPA) which restricts copyright protection for some artistic works that have been industrially exploited to 25 years (instead of 70 years post mortem auctoris).

The repeal of section 52 applies (I believe) to pre-1989 designs that were the subject of Flos, but I am sure that it applies to post-1989 designs that have copyright protection, such as being works of artistic craftsmanship.

As noted in a recent IPKat post, ACID’s consultation on the topic focuses on the effects on pre-1989 designs only, which is consistent with Flos but ignores the totality of the effect of the repeal of section 52; Peter Smith’s comments on that post on the other hand referred mainly to works of artistic craftsmanship, which is all very well post-1989, but seems irrelevant to Flos-derived reason for the repeal of section 52.
(1) The repeal of section 52 seems to be much wider in ambit than is required to address the mischief identified in Flos – why is this? and has there been any consultation about the appropriateness of the repeal of section 52 as a means to achieve the UK’s obligations under Flos?

(2) Does the effect of the repeal have the same effect, or a different effect, vis-à-vis designs pre- and post- CDPA 1988?

(3) Is there anything else I have missed?
Do let us know what you think!