Apple Computer, Inc. v. Mackintosh Computers Ltd.; Apple
Computer, Inc. v. 115778 Canada Inc., [1990] 2 S.C.R. 209
Mackintosh Computers Ltd., Compagnie
d'Électronique Repco Ltée/Repco
Electronics Co. Ltd., Maison des
Semiconducteurs Ltée/House of
Semiconductors Ltd.,
Chico Levy and Nat Levy Appellants
v.
Apple Computer, Inc. Respondent
and between
115778 Canada Inc., carrying on
business
under the firm name and style of
Microcom,
James Begg and 131375
Canada Inc. Appellants
v.
Apple
Computer, Inc. Respondent
indexed as: apple computer, inc. v.
mackintosh computers ltd.; apple computer, inc. v. 115778
canada inc.
File
Nos.: 20643, 20644.
1990:
February 26; 1990: June 21.
Present: Dickson C.J. and Lamer, Wilson, La Forest, L'Heureux‑Dubé,
Sopinka, Gonthier, Cory and McLachlin JJ.
on
appeal from the federal court of appeal
Copyright
-- Infringement -- Computer programs -- Silicon chips ‑‑ Computer
manufacturer holding registered copyright in operating system programs etched
into silicon chips -- Whether computer programs embodied in silicon chips
continue to be protected by copyright -- Copyright Act, R.S.C. 1970,
c. C-30, s. 3(1).
The
respondent holds a registered copyright in two operating system programs for
the Apple II+ computer, which it manufactures. These programs were
originally written in assembly language, and then converted into hexadecimal
code. Finally, the programs were etched into a silicon chip. By the use of a
process known as "burning" the appellants copied the programs
embodied in the respondent's silicon chips. The respondent successfully
sued the appellants for copyright infringement. The trial judge reviewed in
detail the complex and conflicting expert evidence and concluded that the
programs embedded in the silicon chip should be regarded as software rather
than hardware. She found that the circuitry in the chip was both a translation
and an exact reproduction of the assembly language program, and was therefore
protected by copyright under s. 3(1) of the Copyright Act . The
Federal Court of Appeal dismissed the appellants' appeal. This appeal is to
determine whether a computer program, originating in copyrightable written
form, continues to be protected by copyright when it is replicated in the
circuitry of a silicon chip.
Held: The
appeal should be dismissed.
The
programs embedded in the silicon chip are a reproduction of the programs in
assembly language and as such are protected by copyright under s. 3(1) of
the Copyright Act . These programs constitute a form of expression that
is conceptually and functionally unique and cannot be regarded as a merger of
idea and expression. The Australian decision in Computer Edge Pty.
Ltd. v. Apple Computer, Inc., which characterizes the program
embedded in the silicon chip in a manner which accords with the electrical
processes that underlie its operation, should not be applied in Canada.
Rather, the appropriate approach is to view the silicon chip program as
embodying a set of instructions in machine code which are designed to move
information and perform other specified tasks. The silicon chip should be
viewed as a static object encoded with written instructions rather than as
constituting a dynamic interchange of electrical impulses. It follows
that the program embodied in the silicon chip is properly subject to protection
by copyright and the unauthorized copying of that program constitutes a
violation of copyright.
Cases
Cited
Not
followed: Computer Edge Pty. Ltd. v. Apple Computer, Inc. (1986),
65 A.L.R. 33.
Statutes
and Regulations Cited
Copyright Act, R.S.C. 1970,
c. C‑30, s. 3(1).
APPEAL
from a judgment of the Federal Court of Appeal, [1988] 1 F.C. 673, 44
D.L.R. (4th) 74, 81 N.R. 3, 18 C.P.R. (3d) 129, 16 C.I.P.R. 15, affirming a
judgment of the Trial Division, [1987] 1 F.C. 173, 28 D.L.R. (4th) 178, 3
F.T.R. 118, 10 C.P.R. (3d) 1, 8 C.I.P.R. 153, allowing the respondent's action
for copyright infringement. Appeal dismissed.
Robert
H. C. MacFarlane, for the appellants.
Alfred
Schorr, Ivor Hughes and Joseph
Etigson, for the respondent.
//Cory
J.//
The
judgment of the Court was delivered by
CORY J. --
The issue raised in this appeal is whether a computer program, originating in
copyrightable written form, continues to be protected by copyright when it is
replicated in the circuitry of a silicon chip.
Factual
Background
For
the purposes of these reasons, a very brief summary of the facts will suffice.
The
respondent, Apple Computer, Inc., is a manufacturer of computers and related
products, including the Apple II+ computer. The appellants are manufacturers
and vendors of Apple II+ "clones", that is to say, machines which can
run the same programs as Apple II+ computers.
The
respondent has held a registered copyright in two computer programs known as
Autostart ROM and Applesoft since October 8, 1982. These programs are
operating system programs for the Apple II+ computer. Without these programs
or their equivalents, it is impossible to operate "applications"
programs such as word processing, database or spreadsheets that are designed to
run on the Apple II+ computer.
The
Autostart ROM and Applesoft programs were originally written in a code of
letters, symbols and figures known as assembly language. They were then
converted into a form known as hexadecimal code, a shorthand version of the
binary code of "O"s and "1"s representing the series of
"on" and "off" instructions by which a computer is
operated. The hexadecimal code is a substantial reproduction of the programs
as written in the assembly language. Finally, these programs were etched into
the glass of a silicon chip, creating a machine-readable pattern of
"on" and "off" transistors which exactly duplicates the
written binary code.
The
individualized nature of a computer program was emphasized at trial by experts
for both the appellants and the respondent. The trial judge observed that
Professor Forbes J. Burkowski, who testified on behalf of the appellants,
compared the possibility of two programmers creating identical programs without
copying to the likelihood of a monkey sitting at a typewriter producing a
Shakespearean sonnet. She noted that Professor James W. Graham, testifying on
behalf of the respondent, stated that it would take four months for him, with
the help of two students, to write programs to serve the same purpose as those
in issue in this case.
By
the use of a process known as "burning" the appellants copied the
Autostart ROM and Applesoft programs embodied in the respondent's silicon
chips. Subsequently, the respondent sued the appellants for copyright
infringement, seeking an injunction, an accounting of profits and delivery up
of the infringing materials containing copies or virtual copies of these
programs.
The
appellants admitted that the written assembly language versions of the programs
are copyrightable and that the respondent owns the copyright in these
programs. However, they argued that since they had copied only the silicon
chip, and not the assembly program, they had not infringed the respondent's
copyright.
The
Decision at Trial
At
all levels the arguments of the parties turned on the interpretation of s. 3(1)
of the Copyright Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. C-30, the relevant sections of which
provide:
3. (1) For the purposes
of this Act, "copyright" means the sole right to produce or reproduce
the work or any substantial part thereof in any material form whatever ... and
includes the sole right
(a) to produce, reproduce, perform
or publish any translation of the work;
...
(d) in
the case of a literary, dramatic, or musical work, to make any record,
perforated roll, cinematograph film, or other contrivance by means of which the
work may be mechanically performed or delivered;
The
reasons of Reed J. ([1987] 1 F.C. 173) are exemplary. She very carefully
considered and reviewed in detail the complex and conflicting expert evidence.
She accepted the testimony given on behalf of the respondent and concluded that
the programs embedded in the silicon chip should be regarded as software rather
than hardware. She found that the circuitry in the silicon chip was both a
translation and an exact reproduction of the assembly language program. As a
result of this finding, she held that the circuitry of the silicon chip was
protected by copyright under s. 3(1) of the Copyright Act . She
also noted that the computer program in chip form might be protected under s.
3(1) (d), which protects the copyright holder's right to make
any contrivance by means of which the work may be mechanically performed or
delivered. In addition, she rejected the appellants' contentions that the
program embodied in the silicon chip represented a merger of idea and
expression that could not be copyrighted or that it was a subject that was more
appropriately regulated under patent law. In the result, Reed J. granted the
injunction, ordered an accounting of profits and directed the appellants to
deliver up all devices containing the program or copies of it.
The
Federal Court of Appeal
The
appellants' appeal to the Federal Court of Appeal was unanimously dismissed in
three concurring judgments: [1988] 1 F.C. 673. Mahoney J. held that the
programs embodied in the silicon chips were reproductions rather than
translations. Hugessen J. agreed that the silicon chips could not be
translations, which he defined in the traditional sense as "the turning of
something from one human language into another" (p. 691). However, he
held that the Copyright Act gave the
respondent the sole right to produce the means of reproducing a work and that
the appellants had violated this right in copying the silicon chips. MacGuigan
J. held that the silicon chips were either translations or reproductions and in
either form were protected under s. 3(1) .
Neither
Mahoney nor MacGuigan JJ. found it necessary to resolve the issue as to whether
the programs in the silicon chip form could also be regarded as contrivances
pursuant to s. 3(1) (d) while Hugessen J. was of the opinion that the programs
embedded in the chips could not be regarded as contrivances.
In
their argument before the Federal Court of Appeal, the appellants relied in
part on the decision of the High Court of Australia in Computer
Edge Pty. Ltd. v. Apple Computer, Inc. (1986), 65 A.L.R.
33, released one week after Reed J.'s decision. In a virtually identical
factual situation, the Australian High Court held that there had been no
copyright infringement. A majority of the Australian court portrayed the
silicon chip as a dynamic "sequence of electrical impulses" that
could not be the subject of copyright. MacGuigan J., whose conclusions on this
point were adopted by Mahoney J., declined to follow the Australian approach.
He noted that the Australian decision reflected the differences which exist between
Australian and Canadian copyright legislation. Further, he observed that it
was contrary to Reed J.'s conclusion that the programs in chip form should be
regarded as software rather than hardware, that is, copyrightable expression
rather than electrical impulses. As he stated at p. 708:
In my
view it is not necessary for this Court to decide whether, seen in a dynamic or
process approach, the ROM chips are the subject of copyright. All that is
necessary in the cases at bar is to note that such an approach is inconsistent
with the findings of the Trial Judge, which were not successfully challenged.
Disposition
I
agree with the conclusion reached by the trial judge and the Court of Appeal
that the programs embodied in the silicon chip are protected under the Copyright
Act . Indeed, there is little I can or would wish to add to Reed J.'s
excellent reasons.
Like
Reed J. and for the same reasons that were expressed by her, I am of the
opinion that the programs embedded in the silicon chip are a reproduction of
the programs in assembly language and as such are protected by copyright under
s. 3(1) of the Copyright Act . In addition, I
agree with her that these programs constitute a form of expression that is
conceptually and functionally unique and cannot be regarded as a merger of idea
and expression. Since the programs contained in the silicon chip are therefore
protected under the Act, it is unnecessary for me to determine whether the
silicon chips can be regarded as a translation under s. 3(1) (a) or a
contrivance under s. 3(1) (d).
Finally,
like MacGuigan J., I do not believe that the Australian Computer
Edge decision should be applied in Canada. That decision
characterizes the program embedded in the silicon chip in a manner which
accords with the electrical processes that underlie its operation. Rather, the
appropriate approach is to view the silicon chip program as embodying a set of
instructions in machine code which are designed to move information and perform
other specified tasks. I agree with MacGuigan J. that the silicon chip should
be viewed as a static object encoded with written instructions rather than as
constituting a dynamic interchange of electrical impulses. It follows that the
program embodied in the silicon chip is properly subject to protection by
copyright and the unauthorized copying of that program constitutes a violation
of copyright.
Accordingly,
I would dismiss the appeal with costs.
Appeal
dismissed with costs.
Solicitors
for the appellants: Fitzsimmons, MacFarlane, Toronto.
Solicitors
for the respondent: Hughes, Etigson, Concord, Ontario.