Date:
20130617
Docket:
T-583-09
Citation:
2013 FC 427
Ottawa, Ontario,
June 17, 2013
PRESENT: The
Honourable Chief Justice
BETWEEN:
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PLANIFICATION-ORGANISATION-PUBLICATIONS
SYSTÈMES (POPS) LTÉE
and ELIZABETH POSADA
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Plaintiffs
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and
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9054-8181 QUÉBEC
INC,
PHILIPPE CHAPUIS and
BENOIT BAZOGE
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Defendants
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AMENDED REASONS
FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
[1]
This
proceeding has its roots in an apparent misunderstanding that has had a sad
outcome for the three individuals identified above, who were once very dear
friends. The manner in which they have chosen to resolve that misunderstanding
has also been very costly. It is likely that the legal costs alone that each of
them has incurred in connection with this proceeding far exceeds the value of
the interests they assert.
[2]
At
its heart, this case is about whether the Defendants have a right to use a
business simulation software product, and adaptations of that product, in
respect of which the Plaintiffs have registered and claim to own copyright.
[3]
Among
other things, the Plaintiffs seek:
i)
a
declaration that copyright subsists in those software products, that the
Plaintiff PLANIFICATION-ORGANISATION-PUBLICATIONS SYSTÈMES
(POPS) LTÉE [POPS] is the owner of copyright in those products, and that such
copyright has been infringed by the Defendants;
ii)
a
permanent injunction to restrain the Defendants from infringing POPS’ copyright
in those products; and
iii)
all
of the Defendants’ profits arising from their alleged infringing activities, an
accounting of revenues obtained therefrom, certain damages and pre-and
post-judgment interest.
[4]
By
way of counterclaim, the Defendants seek:
i)
an
expungement of POPS’ Certificates of Registration from the Register of
Copyright, together with a declaration that Ms. Posada is not the author of one
of the adaptations of the software (known as “Epsilon”);
ii)
punitive
and exemplary damages in the amount of $10,000;
iii)
$100,000
in solicitor-client costs; and
iv) confirmation
that they hold a perpetual licence to use the software and certain of its
adaptations for all purposes related to IDP Inc’s professional activities.
[5]
For
the reasons set forth below, I have determined that:
i)
copyright
subsists in the above-mentioned software products;
ii)
POPS
is at least one of the rightful owners of copyright in those
products;
iii) the
Defendant 9054-8181
QUÉBEC INC, which also does business as IDP Inc [collectively, IDP]
has at least an implied licence to use those products;
iv) the
Plaintiffs were not entitled to revoke that licence;
v)
the
Defendants did not infringe the Plaintiffs’ copyright and therefore are not
liable to pay any damages, or to account for any profits, to the Plaintiffs;
vi) the
Defendants have not demonstrated that the Plaintiffs’ conduct warrants the
imposition of punitive and exemplary damages, or an award of solicitor-client
costs;
vii) apart
from what is mentioned in subparagraphs 3(i) and 3(ii) above, the Plaintiffs
are not entitled to any of the other relief that they sought in this
proceeding;
viii) the Defendants
are entitled to all of the fixed lump sum amount of $20,000 that the parties
agreed should be the legal costs awarded in this proceeding.
[6]
This
was a bilingual (English and French) proceeding. In the reasons below, all
translations of testimony given in the other official language and of passages
in documents written in that language are my own.
I. The Parties
[7]
The
Plaintiff, POPS, is a federally incorporated company engaged in the business of
software development and commercialization, consulting and professional
training since 1985.
[8]
The
Plaintiff, Elizabeth Posada, is the sole shareholder, director and
officer of POPS. She is also employed at the Université du Québec à
Montréal [UQAM]
as a Professor in the Department of Strategy. She holds a PhD in business
administration and has been intimately involved in the development of the
above-mentioned software products since 1984. In addition, from approximately
February 1, 2007 until at least October 1, 2008, she was a shareholder,
director, officer and employee of IDP.
[9]
The
Defendant, IDP, was formed under the laws of the Province of Quebec in 1997. It is primarily engaged in the business of conducting learning seminars in Canada and abroad for university students and corporations, sometimes with the aid of the
simulation software products that are the subject of this proceeding.
[10]
The
Defendant, Philippe Chapuis, is a shareholder, director, officer and employee
of IDP. He holds a PhD in business administration and has been a lecturer in
the Department of Strategy and Social Responsibility at UQAM for over 10
years.
[11]
The
Defendant, Benoît Bazoge, is a shareholder, director, officer and employee of
IDP. He holds a PhD in business administration, is a Professor in the
Department of Strategy and Social Responsibility at UQAM, and is currently
academic Vice-Dean of the Management School of Business.
II. Background
[12]
In
the 1970s and perhaps earlier, Andrew Szendrovits, a Professor at McMaster University [McMaster], developed a software product alternately known as “Business
Game” and “Business Simulation”, which was programmed in Fortran and operated
on mainframe computers.
[13]
By
all accounts, the software was built around a core of sophisticated
mathematical formulas and “calculation routines” that permitted users to
simulate business outcomes based on inputs that were reduced to what were then
known as punch-cards, which were “read” by mainframe computers.
[14]
In
the early 1980s, when Ms. Posada was a student at the University of Sherbrooke, she assisted a Professor there who used another simulation software product known
as Compete. It appears that Compete was very cumbersome and difficult to use in
the classroom environment. Accordingly, when she first came into contact with
Business Game in approximately 1984, she became interested in the possibility
of switching to that product.
[15]
At
that time, it appears that Business Game was circulating widely in academic
circles in Ontario and Quebec as virtually an open source product.
Contemporaneously, the first microcomputers had started to become available and
Ms. Posada began to investigate the possibility of adapting Business Game to
the microcomputing environment. After discovering that Fortran for
microcomputers was available, she began to develop a microcomputer interface
for Business Game.
[16]
According
to her uncontested testimony, after several months of extensive work, Ms.
Posada was successful in developing the microcomputer interface for the
simulation software, which she began to call “Ceres”. Among other things, an
important and novel feature of Ceres was that it permitted users to learn
business concepts in an interactive manner.
[17]
For
example, among other things, the software allowed users, typically university
students or business executives, to vary certain inputs to produce marketing,
sales, financial, production, inventory and other reports, or “outputs”.
[18]
Notwithstanding
Ms. Posada’s substantial work on the software, which resulted in her having
contributed slightly more lines of the software’s code than Mr. Szendrovits, its
“core”, namely its mathematical formulas and “calculation routines”, remained
virtually unchanged from what was developed by Mr. Szendrovits (Transcript,
January 8, 2013, at p 94).
[19]
Soon
after developing Ceres, Ms. Posada contacted Mr. Szendrovits to inform him of
what she had done with the software. It appears that he took a great interest
in her work and that they soon became good friends.
[20]
In
1985, Mr. Szendrovits, Ms. Posada, Jérôme Doutriaux and Jean-Paul Sallenave
entered into an agreement [the 1985 Agreement] to cede certain
rights in Ceres to POPS.
[21]
According
to Ms. Posada, Mr. Doutriaux was a party to that agreement because he had
translated certain lines of code to permit certain outputs to be displayed in
French (e.g., he adapted the software to enable the words “balance sheet” to be
displayed as “bilan”). Ms. Posada also testified that Mr. Sallenave was a party
to the agreement because he wrote the instruction, pedagogical and other
manuals that were distributed with Ceres during the years that it was sold, in
the 1980s and 1990s.
[22]
Given
that neither Mr. Doutriaux nor Mr. Sallenave participated in this proceeding,
this decision will not address the full extent of their contribution to Ceres
or its manuals, or the nature of the rights, if any, that they may have in
Ceres or its adaptations. Accordingly, any conclusion reached regarding the
ownership of the copyright in Ceres, its adaptations or any manuals that may
continue to include material authored by Mr. Sallenave will be couched in terms
of such ownership being at least “partial” in nature.
[23]
In
approximately 1986, Mr. Bazoge met Mr. Chapuis while they were both doctoral
students. They met Ms. Posada the following year, while she too was a doctoral
student. Over time, they developed a close friendship.
[24]
In
1989, Mr. Bazoge purchased Ceres from POPS on behalf of UQAM for $2,000. The
following year, Mr. Chapuis purchased Ceres for the same amount on behalf of
the École
Supérieure de Commerce in Tours, France.
[25]
In
the last several years, various updated versions of Ceres, known as Epsilon 1,
Epsilon 2 [collectively, Epsilon], Comex and Omega [collectively, the
Software], were developed by one or more parties to this proceeding.
[26]
The
parties’ longstanding informal working relationship was formalized on or about
February 1, 2007, when Ms. Posada became a shareholder, director, officer and
employee of IDP.
[27]
In
October 2008, a dispute arose between the parties. Initially, it appears to
have primarily concerned the compensation that Ms. Posada was receiving from
IDP, relative to that which Messrs. Chapuis and Bazoge were receiving. However,
that dispute quickly expanded to include the terms of Ms. Posada’s exit from
IDP. That dispute is the subject of another proceeding that is currently before
the Superior Court of
Québec.
[28]
By
approximately October 20, 2008, after Ms. Posada came to believe that the
Defendants had begun to assert ownership rights in the copyright to the
software, the dispute further expanded to include the Defendants’ right to use the
Software, and, at least in Ms. Posada’s mind, POPS’ copyright in the Software.
The following year, after attempting to resolve their dispute over the course
of several months, the Plaintiffs instituted this proceeding.
III.
The
Issues
[29]
The
issues to be determined in this proceeding can be conveniently summarized as
follows:
i)
Does
POPS and/or Ms. Posada own the copyright in Ceres or any of its adaptations,
including Comex, Epsilon 1, Epsilon 2 and Omega?
ii)
Was
Ms. Posada hired by IDP to develop any of Comex, Epsilon or Omega?
iii) If
so, what rights, if any, do the Plaintiffs and IDP have in respect of those
versions of the Software, and in Ceres?
iv) Were
the Plaintiffs entitled to revoke any rights that they may have granted to IDP
to use the Software?
v)
Did
the Defendants infringe any copyright that POPS may have held in any versions
of the Software?
vi) If
so, what profits were made by, or should be imputed to, the Defendants in
respect of their allegedly infringing activities and awarded to the Plaintiffs?
vii) What
remedies and legal costs, if any, should be awarded to the Plaintiffs or the
Defendants?
[30]
Although
the foregoing statement of issues differs somewhat from the issues identified
by Prothonotary Morneau in his Order dated April 25, 2012, and by the parties themselves
in the Joint List of Issues To Be Determined At Trial, I am satisfied based on
the parties’ pleadings and the issues jointly addressed during the proceeding
that the foregoing list accurately reflects and summarizes the issues in this
proceeding.
IV.
Relevant
Legislation
[31]
It
is not disputed between the parties that software falls within the following
definition of “every original literary, dramatic, musical and artistic work”
that is set forth in section 2 of the Copyright Act, RSC, 1985 c C-42 [the
Act]:
“every
original literary, dramatic, musical and artistic work”
« toute oeuvre littéraire, dramatique, musicale ou
artistique originale »
“every
original literary, dramatic, musical and artistic work” includes every original production in the literary, scientific or
artistic domain, whatever may be the mode or form of its expression, such as
compilations, books, pamphlets and other writings, lectures, dramatic or
dramatico-musical works, musical works, translations, illustrations, sketches
and plastic works relative to geography, topography, architecture or science;
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«
toute oeuvre littéraire, dramatique, musicale ou artistique originale »
“every original literary, dramatic, musical and
artistic work”
« toute
oeuvre littéraire, dramatique, musicale ou artistique originale » S’entend de toute production originale du domaine littéraire,
scientifique ou artistique quels qu’en soient le mode ou la forme
d’expression, tels les compilations, livres, brochures et autres écrits, les
conférences, les oeuvres dramatiques ou dramatico-musicales, les oeuvres
musicales, les traductions, les illustrations, les croquis et les ouvrages
plastiques relatifs à la géographie, à la topographie, à l’architecture ou
aux sciences.
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[32]
Section
2 of the Act also defines “infringing” to mean, “in relation to any work in
which copyright subsists, any copy, including any colourable imitation, made or
dealt with in contravention of this Act.”
[33]
Pursuant
to section 3 of the Act, “copyright”, in relation to
a work, means the sole right to produce or reproduce the work or any
substantial part thereof in any material form whatever, to perform the work or
any substantial part thereof in public or, if the work is unpublished, to
publish the work or any substantial part thereof. Pursuant to paragraph
3(1)(a), this includes the sole right to produce, reproduce, perform or
publish any translation of the work.
[34]
Pursuant
to subsection 5(1), copyright subsists in every original literary, dramatic,
musical and artistic work if certain conditions are met. It is not contested by
the parties that the requisite conditions in respect of the Software are met in
this proceeding. Accordingly,
as requested by the Plaintiffs, a declaration to this effect will be made in
the attached judgment and it is not necessary to address that issue in these
reasons.
[35]
Subsection
13(1) of the Act states that the author of a work shall be the first owner of
the copyright therein. However, subsection 13(3) states:
Work made in the course of employment
(3) Where the author of a
work was in the employment of some other person under a contract of service
or apprenticeship and the work was made in the course of his employment by
that person, the person by whom the author was employed shall, in the absence
of any agreement to the contrary, be the first owner of the copyright, but
where the work is an article or other contribution to a newspaper, magazine
or similar periodical, there shall, in the absence of any agreement to the
contrary, be deemed to be reserved to the author a right to restrain the
publication of the work, otherwise than as part of a newspaper, magazine or
similar periodical.
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Oeuvre exécutée dans l’exercice d’un emploi
(3) Lorsque l’auteur est
employé par une autre personne en vertu d’un contrat de louage de service ou
d’apprentissage, et que l’oeuvre est exécutée dans l’exercice de cet emploi,
l’employeur est, à moins de stipulation contraire, le premier titulaire du
droit d’auteur; mais lorsque l’oeuvre est un article ou une autre
contribution, à un journal, à une revue ou à un périodique du même genre,
l’auteur, en l’absence de convention contraire, est réputé posséder le droit
d’interdire la publication de cette oeuvre ailleurs que dans un journal, une
revue ou un périodique semblable.
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[36]
Subsection
13(4) of the Act deals with assignments and licences. That provision states:
Assignments and licences
(4) The
owner of the copyright in any work may assign the right, either wholly or
partially, and either generally or subject to limitations relating to territory,
medium or sector of the market or other limitations relating to the scope of
the assignment, and either for the whole term of the copyright or for any
other part thereof, and may grant any interest in the right by licence, but
no assignment or grant is valid unless it is in writing signed by the owner
of the right in respect of which the assignment or grant is made, or by the
owner’s duly authorized agent.
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Cession et licences
(4) Le titulaire du droit
d’auteur sur une oeuvre peut céder ce droit, en totalité ou en partie, d’une
façon générale ou avec des restrictions relatives au territoire, au support
matériel, au secteur du marché ou à la portée de la cession, pour la durée
complète ou partielle de la protection; il peut également concéder, par une
licence, un intérêt quelconque dans ce droit; mais la cession ou la
concession n’est valable que si elle est rédigée par écrit et signée par le
titulaire du droit qui en fait l’objet, ou par son agent dûment autorisé.
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[37]
Pursuant
to subsection 27(1), it is an infringement of copyright for any person to
do, without the consent of the owner of the copyright, anything that only the
owner of the copyright has the right to do under the Act. Subsection 27(2)
specifically states that it is an infringement of copyright for any person to:
Secondary infringement
(2) It is an infringement
of copyright for any person to
(a) sell or rent out,
(b) distribute to such an extent as to affect
prejudicially the owner of the copyright,
(c) by way of trade distribute, expose or
offer for sale or rental, or exhibit in public,
(d) possess for the purpose of doing anything
referred to in paragraphs (a) to (c), or
(e) import into Canada for the purpose of
doing anything referred to in paragraphs (a) to (c),
a copy of a work, sound
recording or fixation of a performer’s performance or of a communication
signal that the person knows or should have known infringes copyright or
would infringe copyright if it had been made in Canada by the person who made
it.
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Violation à une étape ultérieure
(2) Constitue une
violation du droit d’auteur l’accomplissement de tout acte ci-après en ce qui
a trait à l’exemplaire d’une œuvre, d’une fixation d’une prestation, d’un
enregistrement sonore ou d’une fixation d’un signal de communication alors
que la personne qui accomplit l’acte sait ou devrait savoir que la production
de l’exemplaire constitue une violation de ce droit, ou en constituerait une
si l’exemplaire avait été produit au Canada par la personne qui l’a produit:
a) la vente ou la location;
b) la mise en circulation de façon à porter préjudice
au titulaire du droit d’auteur;
c) la mise en circulation, la mise ou l’offre en
vente ou en location, ou l’exposition en public, dans un but
commercial ;
d) la possession en vue de l’un ou l’autre des actes
visés aux alinéas a) à c) ;
e) l’importation au Canada en vue de l’un ou l’autre des
actes visés aux alinéas a) à c).
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[38]
Pursuant
to section 34(1) of the Act, where copyright has been infringed, the
owner of the copyright is, subject to other provisions in the Act, entitled to
all remedies by way of injunction, damages, accounts, delivery up and otherwise
that are or may be conferred by law for the infringement of a right.
[39]
It
is also pertinent to note that, pursuant to paragraph 34(1)(b), in any civil
proceedings taken under the Act, the author is presumed to be the owner of
copyright. In addition, pursuant to subsection 53(2), a certificate of
registration of copyright is evidence that the copyright subsists and that the
person registered is the owner of the copyright.
V.
Analysis
A. Does POPS and/or Ms. Posada own
the copyright in Ceres?
[40]
The
Plaintiffs submit
POPS owns the copyright in Ceres by virtue of either:
i)
the
1985 Agreement;
ii)
a
letter dated March 25, 1998 [the 1998 Szendrovits Letter], in which
Andrew Szendrovits purported to grant certain rights to POPS;
iii) an
assignment to POPS dated October 28, 2008, from Mr. Les Szendrovits [the Les
Szendrovits Assignment], acting on behalf of his mother and the estate of
Andrew Szendrovits;
iv) an
assignment to POPS, dated October 29, 2009, by Elsie Quait-Randall, on behalf
of McMaster [the McMaster Assignment].
[41]
In
addition, the Plaintiffs assert that POPS’ registration of its ownership
interest in Ceres on September 25, 1991 gave rise to a presumption that it is
the rightful owner of that software.
[42]
The
recitals to the Les Szendrovits Assignment and the McMaster Assignment make it
clear that they were executed for the purpose of resolving any doubt that may
have existed regarding the ownership of copyright in Ceres. In the case, of
the McMaster Assignment, the document also confirmed McMaster’s right to
continue to use Ceres and the updated versions thereof.
[43]
The
Defendants submit that from the outset of their relationship with Ms. Posada
until the time their dispute with her arose in October 2008, they accepted on
good faith Ms. Posada’s representations concerning POPS’ ownership of the
copyright in Ceres.
[44]
For
various reasons, they maintain that none of the documents listed above effectively
transferred ownership of the copyright in Ceres to POPS.
[45]
For
the reasons set forth below, I disagree.
i. The
1985 Agreement
[46]
It
is common ground between the parties that Andrew Szendrovitz was the author of
the core source code of Ceres. However, the Defendants submit that he developed
Ceres in his capacity as an employee of McMaster, and that pursuant to
subsection 13(3) of the Act, McMaster was the original owner of the copyright
in Ceres and has never properly ceded that copyright to POPS or Ms. Posada.
[47]
Accordingly,
the Defendants maintain that the copyright in Ceres could not have been
assigned by the 1985 Agreement, because McMaster was not a party to that
agreement. That particular submission will be dealt with in part V.A(iv) of
these reasons below.
[48]
In
any event, the Defendants assert that the 1985 Agreement did not assign
ownership of the copyright in Ceres to POPS. I agree.
[49]
The
1985 Agreement is entitled “Contrat de Promotion,” which may be translated as
“Promotion Contract”. Nowhere in that document is there an assignment of the
copyright in Ceres to POPS.
[50]
Instead,
the first paragraph of the agreement states: “The undersigned, co-authors of
the business simulation CERES, cede by the present document to the company POPS
Ltée,
of Sherbrooke, Québec, the rights to promote CERES in all languages and
in all countries.” Consistent with POPS’ status under the agreement
as a promoter, it is referred to throughout the agreement as “the promoter.” In
addition, in addressing the scope of the rights granted under the agreement,
Article II(1) states that “the authors expressly and exclusively cede to the
promoter the rights to translate in all languages and all countries, to market,
to adapt and to reproduce [Ceres] by all existing and future visual, audio
[and] electronic means, without exception or reserve.” There is no language in
that article which assigns the copyright in Ceres to POPS.
[51]
Also,
in Article II(3), an obligation is imposed upon POPS to communicate to the
authors the results of any negotiations with third parties. In my view, in the
context of the 1985 Agreement, that provision is more consistent with a
promotion or distribution agreement than it is with an outright assignment of
copyright. The intention of the authors to retain their ownership of the
copyright in Ceres is further reflected in, Article I(1), which deals with the
duration of the agreement and states that it is intended “to have effect for
the entire period during which the literary interest of the authors, or their
[ayants droit] or representatives, shall last.”
[52]
The
Plaintiffs rely upon the use of the word “cession” in the second paragraph of
the agreement, in the titles of Articles I and II, and in the opening words of
both of those articles, to support their argument that the document was
intended to function as an assignment of the copyright in Ceres to POPS.
However, the second paragraph simply served to make clear that the rights being
granted under the agreement were subject to the conditions set forth in
Articles I, II and III. In addition, the headings of Articles 1 and II have no
legal effect, and the opening words of those articles were simply introductory
in nature and served no other purpose.
[53]
The
Plaintiffs and the Defendants each asserted that their view of the 1985
Agreement was supported by the provisions of Article III, which requires POPS
to forward to the authors, (i) in equal parts, the totality of net proceeds
received from sales of the Ceres user’s manual; and (ii) 10% of the net
revenues received from the sale of computer disks and the instructor’s manual.
In my view, Article III is not particularly helpful in determining whether the
1985 Agreement either effectively conveyed, or was intended to convey, the
copyright in Ceres to POPS. However, it does convey the parties’ view that they
intended their agreement to include the right for POPS to distribute Ceres.
That view is reinforced by Article 1(3) of the Agreement, which prevents the
authors from distributing the Software or its adaptations without the prior
written agreement of POPS.
[54]
Given
all of the foregoing, I agree with the Defendants that even if Mr. Szendrovits
owned the copyright in Ceres in 1985, the 1985 Agreement did not transfer that
ownership interest to POPS. However, it was effective in conferring upon POPS a
very broad and exclusive licence to, among other things, distribute, adapt and
sell Ceres.
[55]
Given
Ms. Posada’s confirmation on cross-examination (Transcript, January 8, 2013, at
pages 191-195) that POPS’ registration of its purported ownership interest in
Ceres on September 25, 1991 was based solely on her belief that POPS obtained
such “ownership interest” pursuant to the 1985 Agreement, I am satisfied that
any presumption that such registration may have created in favour of POPS’
ownership of Ceres has been rebutted (Samsonite Canada Inc v Costco
Wholesale Corporation, [1993] FCJ No 302) [Samsonite]; Oakley Inc
v Shoppers Drug Mart Inc, [2001] FCJ No 415, at para 33 [Oakley]).
[56]
One
implication of the above finding is that Ms. Posada remained an owner of Ceres,
in her capacity as one of its authors.
ii. The
1998 Szendrovits Letter
[57]
The
Plaintiffs asserted in their pleadings that the 1985 Agreement “was, to the
degree necessary, confirmed or perfected through the [1998 Szendrovits
Letter].” I disagree.
[58]
That
short letter, which was sent by Andrew Szendrovits to POPS, simply stated the
following:
The undersigned hereby authorize and give [sic] exclusive
right to POPPS LTEE [sic] for using [sic] the original sources of
the above named simulation, in any language, as well as exclusive rights to
negotiate all relevant issues and matters in the names of Elizabeth Posada and
Andrew Z. Szendrovits.
[59]
In
cross-examination, Andrew Szendrovits’ nephew, Les Szendrovits, testified in a
forthright and credible manner that his uncle was someone who would certainly
have understood the meaning of the words he used in his correspondence. In
particular, according to his nephew, he would have understood the difference
between giving something and giving permission to use something (Transcript,
January 8, 2013, at p 141).
[60]
The
language quoted above does not in any way convey any ownership interest in the
core source code of Ceres, or anything else, to POPS. Instead, for the present
purposes, the key language used was “for using,” and “exclusive rights to
negotiate all relevant issues and matters in the names of Elizabeth Posada and
Andrew Z. Szendrovits.”
[61]
With
this in mind, and given the above-mentioned testimony of Mr. Les Szendrovits, I
am satisfied that the 1998 Szendrovits Letter did not convey to POPS Mr. Andrew
Szendrovits’ ownership interest in the core source code of POPS.
iii. The
Les Szendrovits Assignment
[62]
The
Plaintiffs submit that the Les Szendrovits Assignment effectively assigned any
residual rights that Andrew Szendrovits may have held in Ceres at the time of
his death. I agree.
[63]
Mr.
Les Szendrovits’ forthright and uncontested testimony was that he was very
close to Andrew Szendrovits and his spouse, Margaret Szendrovits. Based on his
understanding of “the family’s knowledge,” and specific conversations that he
had with other members of the family prior to testifying in this proceeding, he
believed that Andrew Szendrovits “had handed over basically the running of
[Ceres] to Dr. Posada” and that the effect of the 1985 Agreement was to convey
all rights in Ceres to Ms. Posada (Transcript, January 8, 2013, at pp 130-131,
and 137). Given that understanding, he had “no qualms signing” the Les
Szendrovits Assignment, to assist Ms. Posada to establish the ownership
interest in Ceres that he believed his uncle had previously transferred to her
(Transcript, January 8, 2013, at pp 147-148).
[64]
There
was no mention of the Business Game, Ceres or other software in Andrew
Szendrovits’ Will. Nevertheless, pursuant to paragraph 3(e1) of the Will, the
residue of Andrew Szendrovits’ estate was transferred to Margaret Szendrovits
for her own use absolutely.
[65]
Margaret
Szendrovits signed a Continuing Power of Attorney for Property dated November
2, 1994, which was tendered into evidence by the Plaintiffs. Pursuant to
paragraph 1 of that document, she appointed her husband, Andrew Szendrovits to
be her attorney for property. In the event that he became unable to act by
reason of death, incapacitation or resignation, she substituted and appointed
her son, William Szendrovits to be her attorney for property in her husband’s
place. In turn, in the event that William became unable to act for those same
reasons, she substituted and appointed her sister Hayna Szendrovits. In turn,
in the event that she became unable to act for those reasons, Hayna’s son, Les
Szendrovits was substituted and appointed to be Margaret’s attorney for
property.
[66]
Les
Szendrovits testified that since his aunt Margaret became incapacitated, he has
had the power of attorney [POA] to act on her behalf, because William has “lost
the power to look after himself” (as reflected by the fact that his daughter
looks after his affairs), and Hayna is 89 years old and “signed over her powers”
to him (Les). Les Szendrovits also testified that William has been a
schizophrenic since the 1970s.
[67]
In
final argument, the Defendants invited the Court to question the validity of
the above-mentioned Will and POA, given that William’s parents gave him important
responsibilities under those documents, which were executed in 1995 and 1994,
respectively, notwithstanding that he had been a schizophrenic since the
1970s. However, based on Les Szendrovits’ testimony that William’s condition
has “gotten progressively worse,” I am not persuaded that it would be
appropriate to question the validity of those documents, solely on the basis
suggested by the Defendants.
[68]
Among
other things, the recitals in Les Szendrovits Assignment state that, “in a
simple document” Andrew Szendrovits “intended to assign all of his rights” in
the software known as Ceres to POPS and that “there may be some doubt as to the
completeness or efficacy of” the simple document. It is not entirely clear
whether the document in question is the 1985 Agreement or the 1998 Szendrovits
Letter. However, given that the 1985 Agreement is mentioned at paragraph 3 of
the Les Szendrovits Assignment, I am inclined to infer that it is the “simple
document” in question.
[69]
Given
the aforementioned doubt, the recitals proceed to state that “for greater
certainty, the Assignor wishes to assign and transfer unto POPS Ltée (the
“Assignee”) the Assignor’s entire right, title and interest to copyright in the
Work, and wishes to further waive in favour of the Assignee all of the
Assignor’s moral rights related to the Work.” The “Assignor” was defined to be
“Margaret Szendrovits and the Estate of Andrew Szendrovits.” The “Work” was
defined to be Ceres.
[70]
Paragraph
2 of the document then states:
In return for the Royalty, defined hereunder, and
for other good and valuable consideration, the receipt and sufficiency of which
is hereby acknowledged, the Assignor hereby assigns and transfers in perpetuity
to the Assignee the Assignor’s entire right, title and interest, worldwide, in
and to all ownership, intellectual property and all other property rights
including, without limitation, the copyright, in the Work authored in whole or
in part by [Andrew Szendrovits], including all rights of action, powers and benefits
relating thereto.
[71]
In
my view, the language of paragraph 2 clearly and unequivocally transferred any
and all residual interest that Andrew Szendrovits continued to have in Ceres, including his copyright,
after he executed the 1985 Agreement and the 1998 Szendrovits Letter. In
passing, I would simply add that, pursuant to paragraph 4, the document also
expressly assigned all of the assignor’s moral rights in Ceres to POPS.
iv.
The McMaster Assignment
[72]
The
Defendants submit that the Les Szendrovits Assignment could not have legally
assigned to POPS the copyright in the core source code of Ceres that was
written by Andrew Szendrovits, because Andrew Szendrovits was employed by McMaster
when he wrote that source code. In support of that position, the Defendants
rely on subsection 13(3) of the Act, which deems an employer to be the first
author of a work created by an employee in the course of his or her employment.
I disagree with the Defendants’ position on this point.
[73]
In
the months following the dispute that led to this proceeding, Ms. Posada
contacted one or more representatives of McMaster to confirm that it did not
assert any rights to the copyright in Ceres. After an internal investigation,
Ms. Elsie Quaite-Randall, Executive Director of McMaster’s Industrial Liaison
Office [ILO], executed an assignment to POPS, dated October 29, 2008, of
McMaster’s “entire right, title and interest, worldwide, in and to all
ownership, intellectual property and other proprietary rights including,
without limitation, the copyright in the Work authored in whole or in part by
Dr. Szendrovits,
including all rights of action, powers and benefits relating thereto.”
[74]
Among other things, the recitals to the McMaster Assignment state
that Andrew Szendrovits was employed by McMaster during the period in which he
authored his contribution to Ceres, that he used that software as one of his
teaching aids, that POPS wished to confirm that there to do not exist competing
claims to the ownership of Ceres, that POPS was prepared to grant to McMaster a
licence to continue to use Ceres and updated versions of Ceres, and that the university
“has, and makes, no claim whatsoever to the title to, nor any rights in,
[Ceres]”. The recitals conclude by stating that the university (defined as the
“Assignor”) wished to “assign and transfer into POPS Ltd (the “Assignee”) all
of the Assignor’s entire right, title and interest in and to the copyright and
other rights in [Ceres].”
[75]
In the absence of Ms. Quaite-Randall, who was on sabbatical in the
Philippines at the time of the trial, her colleague Ms. Gay Yuyitung
testified on behalf of McMaster. Ms. Yuyitung is a Business Development Manager
in the ILO at the university. She reports to Ms. Quaite-Randall.
[76]
Ms.
Yuyitung testified in a straightforward and credible manner. Among other
things, she stated that the ILO handles the patenting, licensing and
commercialization of all intellectual property that is developed at McMaster.
In addition, she stated that she was the one who investigated and determined that
Andrew Szendrovits
had developed the Software “as part of his teaching materials at the
university.” She noted that Ms. Quaite-Randall typically does not conduct an
extensive review of the documents that she signs, but rather relies on her
staff – in this case, Ms. Yuyitung and one other person – to conduct the
required review. She also testified that she helped to review the McMaster
Assignment prior to its execution, that she recognized the signature on the
McMaster Assignment as being Ms. Quaite-Randall’s signature, and that she was
told by Ms. Quaite-Randall in an e-mail that she had signed that assignment.
[77]
Ms. Yuyitung further testified that her understanding “has always
been that instructional materials – teaching materials are owned by the professor.”
In this regard, she identified the applicable policy as being a document entitled Distribution
of Income from the Sale of Instructional Materials [the DISIM Policy]
applied to the software. She stated that she satisfied herself that the DISIM
Policy applies to the software developed by Andrew Szendrovits. She also noted
this policy came into effect on March 16, 1981, and that “[t]he intent of the
policy is that the copyright is owned by the professor.” She added that prior
to the issuance of the DISIM Policy, the University’s position was that the
copyright in any instructional materials developed by a professor was held by
the professor. In support of the latter view, section D.1.1 of the DISIM Policy
states: “The University affirms the traditional practice that copyright in
instructional materials produced by faculty members belongs to those faculty
members, except in the special cases listed below.” None of those special cases
applies to the facts at issue in this case. Significantly, Section B.3 of that
policy also states that the DISIM Policy “is intended to serve as the
‘agreement to the contrary’ on behalf of McMaster University and its academic
and non-academic staff,” within the meaning of what is now subsection 13(3) of
the Act.
[78]
On
cross-examination, Ms. Yuyitung was presented with another policy, entitled Intellectual
Property Policy, dated May 27, 1998, together with a policy entitled Joint
Intellectual Property Policy [JIPP], which “Supersedes/Amends” the 1998 policy and
governs all matters related to intellectual property at the institutions
covered by that policy, after its coming into force on January 1, 2005.
[79]
Ms.
Yuyitung acknowledged that she was aware that, pursuant to Article 9.1 of the
JIIP, “the University shall be the nominal owner of all newly created or
discovered Intellectual Property arising at any of the institutions.” She also
acknowledged that Article 2.7 of the JIIP specifically includes “computer
software recorded in any format” within the definition of Intellectual Property,
and that there is no reference to “computer software” in the DISIM Policy.
[80]
In
the absence of any further testimony on behalf of McMaster or otherwise
regarding the interplay of the DISIM Policy and the JIIP, I accept Ms.
Yuyitung’s view that the DISIM Policy applies to the software that was created
by Andrew Szendrovits
and that now forms part of the Software. Her position on this point would
appear to be supported by the fact that while the DISIM Policy explicitly
affirms that copyright in instructional materials produced by faculty members
belongs to those faculty members, except in cases that are not applicable in
the case at bar, the JIIP does not mention copyright and establishes ownership
rights only in “newly created or discovered intellectual property” (Articles
1.3(d), 9.1 and 9.2). In addition, both the JIPP and the 1998 Intellectual
Property Policy exclude from their application any matters dealt with in
the DISIM Policy (Article 4.3(c)), as well as “computer software that is either
ancillary to or the functional equivalent of any of the items described in
paragraph [4.3](a) hereof where such material has been created by someone who
is a member of the Teaching Staff.” Among other things, paragraph 4.3(a)
excludes from that policy copyright in and title to lecture notes, laboratory
manuals, articles, books, artifacts, works of visual art, maps, charts, and
other materials “no matter in which format they may have been recorded or
embodied, including, without limitation, in a computer readable format, where
any of the foregoing material has been created by someone who is a member of
the Teaching Staff.” I accept Ms. Yuyitung’s view that the
Software authored by Mr. Szendrovits falls within this exception.
[81]
Based on the foregoing, I am satisfied that Andrew Szendrovits was
the original author and owner of the copyright in the Software that he
contributed to Ceres and that I have found was effectively conveyed to POPS
pursuant to the Les Szendrovits Assignment.
[82]
In any event, I am satisfied that the terms of the McMaster
Agreement are sufficiently clear and unambiguous to have effected an assignment
of any copyright that McMaster may have still owned as at the date that
agreement was executed, on October 29, 2008.
v. Summary
[83]
Andrew
Szendrovits was the first author of, and the owner of copyright in, the
software that he contributed to Ceres. The 1985 Agreement did not transfer his
ownership interest or copyright in that software to POPS. However, it was
effective in conferring upon POPS a very broad, and exclusive, licence to,
among other things, distribute, market, sell and adapt Ceres. The 1998
Szendrovits Letter did not change this state of affairs.
[84]
Nevertheless,
the Les Szendrovits Assignment did effectively convey to POPS the copyright in
that software, as required by subsection 34(1) of the Act. Accordingly, POPS
has been the owner of that copyright, subject to any rights that Messrs.
Sallenave and Doutriaux may have, since the date of that assignment, namely,
October 28, 2008. In any event, even if McMaster was the first owner of that
copyright, pursuant to section 13(3) of the Act and the applicable policy of
McMaster, that copyright was effectively assigned to POPS pursuant to the
McMaster Agreement, dated October 29, 2008. Given my conclusion on this point,
it is not necessary to address the oral submissions made by the Plaintiffs, in
the alternative, regarding POPS’ copyright in a “compilation” that consisted of
the software developed by both Mr. Szendrovits and Ms. Posada.
B.
Was
Ms. Posada hired by IDP to develop any of Omega, Comex or Epsilon?
[85]
The
Defendants assert that Ms. Posada was hired by IDP to develop Comex and
Epsilon, and to complete the development of Omega, which IDP had been
collaborating with her to develop for many years prior to her becoming an
employee of IDP. However, the Plaintiffs maintain that the parties at no time
discussed software development as being among Ms. Posada’s responsibilities as
an employee of IDP. They also maintain that the parties never discussed Ms.
Posada having responsibility for the translation, adaptation or programming
required to develop the Software.
[86]
In
my view, the evidence establishes the Defendants’ version of events in relation
to this and other issues addressed below, except where otherwise indicated.
Where there are inconsistencies between, on the one hand, the testimony of Ms.
Posada and, on the other hand, the testimony of Messrs. Chapuis and Bazoge, I
have generally accepted the latter over the former, because I found Messrs. Chapuis
and Bazoge to be much more straightforward, forthcoming and generally reliable
than Ms. Posada, who was sometimes evasive, at other times unable to recollect
specific facts and on occasion took positions that strained credulity.
[87]
According
to Mr. Bazoge, IDP was registered as a business name in 1992 and incorporated
in 1997. During that period, he and Mr. Chapuis collaborated closely with Ms.
Posada on numerous seminars. In general terms, they contributed most of the
pedagogical content and Ms. Posada contributed, among other things, Ceres. By
1998, the three of them agreed that it was becoming necessary to develop a
Windows version of Ceres, due to the increasing popularity of successive
versions of Microsoft’s Windows software (Transcript, January 9, 2013, at p
77-78).
[88]
Accordingly,
they entered into an agreement with a young student named Vlady Ravelomanana
[Vlady], who Messrs. Bazoge and Chapuis had met in France. The opening terms of
that one-page agreement, which was produced at Tab 14 of the Joint Book of
Documents [JBD], state that its purpose is to form “a contractual relationship
concerning the development of a new business simulation software.” The parties
then agreed that (i) the source code of the software would remain with POPS,
represented by Ms. Posada, (ii) neither Vlady nor IDP could use the source code
to develop an adaptation of the new software without the explicit agreement of
POPS, (iii) IDP was invited to participate in the development of the new
software, and was authorized to use that software without having to provide
further consideration (“à
titre gracieux”); and (iv) no copies of that software would be used
unless they had been purchased and the acquiring company’s logo was reflected
in the boot-up screens produced by the software. Unfortunately for the parties,
Vlady ultimately did not deliver on his commitment. Nevertheless, I accept Mr.
Bazoge’s testimony that this agreement, which was signed by Ms. Posada (on
behalf of POPS), Mr. Bazoge (on behalf of IDP) and Vlady, marked the beginning
of a more formal alliance between the parties to develop a Windows version of
Ceres (Transcript, January 9, 2013, at p 79).
[89]
By
the year 2000, Messrs. Bazoge and Chapuis agreed among themselves to provide
Ms. Posada with an incentive to accelerate her efforts to develop a
Windows version of Ceres. To this end, they entered into an arrangement with
POPS pursuant to which, among other things, POPS would be paid $1,000 for each
seminar in which IDP used Ceres (Transcript, January 9, 2013, at p 83; January
10, 2013, at p 104). In return, POPS would pay IDP $1,000 each time Ms. Posada
used IDP’s pedagogical material in one of her seminars. An unsigned version of
that agreement [the 2000 Agreement], dated March 16, 2000, was produced at Tab
15 of the JDB. Under the heading “Contribution,” it was stated that “IDP
(Philippe et Benoît) continue to participate in the development of the product
(strategy, marketing, finance) and Elizabeth is responsible for the development
of new versions of the software” (my translation). Under the heading
“Planning,” it was stated:
Having regard to the pending disappearance of DOS,
it is imperative that the software Ceres (or another name) be rewritten for the
Windows environment. Elizabeth undertakes to finalise a new Windows version
(with user-friendly inputs) by December 2000. A meeting is scheduled in the
coming weeks (before the end of May) to work on modifications and/or
enhancements to the simulation.
[90]
Mr.
Chapuis forthrightly acknowledged that he could not definitively recall if the
2000 Agreement had ever been signed. However, he stated that he thought it had
been signed (Transcript, January 10, 2013, at p 105). In any event, Mr. Bazoge
testified that IDP acted in accordance with the agreement for approximately 5
or 6 years, during which they paid Ms. Posada $1,000 per year, to reflect the
single contract that they had during that period (which was renewed each
year). This was not disputed by Ms. Posada, who acknowledged being a party to
a verbal agreement receiving the annual $1,000 payments. However, she
maintained that the 2000 Agreement was never signed and that therefore no legal
contract had been entered into (Transcript, January 10, 2013, at p 164-6).
Given that the parties acted in accordance with the agreement and each of them
recognized that the agreement was at least verbal in nature, I am satisfied
that even if that agreement was not ultimately signed, it was a binding verbal
agreement between the parties.
[91]
By
early December 2000, Ms. Posada had not yet developed a Windows version of
Ceres, as she had at least verbally agreed to do. In my view, this explains why
she entered into an agreement, dated December 10, 2000, with Mr. Fernando
Romero, a computer programmer. Pursuant to that agreement [the Romero
Agreement], which was on POPS letterhead and signed by Mr. Romero and Ms.
Posada, Mr. Romero agreed to program and conduct tests for a Windows interface
for Ceres that would be marketed under the name Omega or under another name.
Among other things, that agreement also provided that the new interface would
remain the exclusive property of POPS. Ms. Posada testified that she entered
into the Romero Agreement because she was unfamiliar with a program named
Crystal Reports, which was required “to program the input/output part of the
simulation that was going to be called Omega” (Transcript, January 8, 2013, at
pp. 112-113). Mr. Bazoge speculated that Mr. Romero may have been hired to fix
a number of “bugs” that existed in the Windows version of Ceres that the
parties had agreed to develop.
[92]
Mr.
Bazoge testified that between December 2000 and the fall of 2006, he and Mr.
Chapuis were invited to attend a number of meetings to provide their views on
certain characteristics of the evolving software (Transcript, January 9, 2013,
at p 87). This was not disputed by Ms. Posada.
[93]
According
to Mr. Bazoge, by the fall of 2006, the Windows version of Ceres still had not
been fully developed and the parties began to discuss a more formal partnership
(Transcript, January 9, 2013, at p 88). Contemporaneously, and as reflected in
various exchanges of e-mails dated between November 2006 and the beginning of
February 2007, and which are included at Tab 30 of the JDB, the parties
continued to work together.
[94]
For
example, in an e-mail dated November 16, 2006, which appears at page 203 of the
JBD, Mr. Chapuis reminded Mr. Bazoge, Ms. Posada and others of the workplan
that had been established on November 13, 2006. Among other things, he noted
that “everyone” was responsible for proposing modules to be added to Ceres, and
that Mr. Bazoge was responsible for testing Ceres in a limited “consumer
market,” with a view to proposing a strategy to expand the software if the
tests were positive. In another exchange dated January 6, 2007, Mr. Bazoge sent
to Ms. Posada and Mr. Chapuis a patch that had been developed for the new
adaptation of the software by Mr. Trepanier, a programmer who had been paid by
IDP. In another e-mail, dated January 9, 2007, which appears at page 212 of the
JBD, Ms. Posada sent a list of her clients to Mr. Bazoge. In a further e-mail
dated January 16, 2007, included at page 214 of the JBD, Mr. Bazoge reported to
Mr. Chapuis and Ms. Posada that he had met someone who might be able to assist
them with a particular problem that they had encountered with the software.
[95]
On
November 23, 2006, Mr. Chapuis sent an e-mail to Ms. Posada, with a copy to Mr.
Bazoge, entitled “Project ID-POP Revisited.” Under the heading “Project
ID-POP,” it was stated:
Creation of a JV for the development of Omega and
the exploitation of Ceres, with:
Option I – 2 shareholders IDP and POP [sic]
or
Option II – 3 people.
Among other things, it was then
suggested in the e-mail that it would have to be confirmed with an accountant
which option might be more advantageous. Under the subsequent heading
“Objective,” it was noted: “Develop and licence a business simulation that
would vary according to the clientele (segmentation).” Under the next heading
“Organization (general)”, it was noted, among other things, that “POP [sic]
brings Ceres and Omega and their future adaptations.” In her testimony, Ms. Posada
pointed to the latter statement as supporting her position that Omega was
largely completed before she became an employee of IDP. Although she later
acknowledged that work continued on Omega after that time, she maintained that
such work, as well as her work on Comex and Epsilon, was on behalf of POPS,
rather than IDP (Transcript, January 8, 2013, at pp 195 and 205-6).
[96]
Shortly
after the latter e-mail was sent, Mr. Chapuis prepared another document for a
meeting on January 3, 2007, just weeks before Ms. Posada became an employee of
IDP, on February 1, 2007 (Agreed Statement of Facts and Admissions [ASFA],
paragraph 3). Among other things, that document, entitled “IDP + POP = IDP”
indicated that Ms. Posada would obtain a 25% equity interest in IDP in exchange
for POPS, including the commercial rights to Ceres. In addition, IDP would
acquire the right to use POPS’ trade name. It was also stipulated that Mr.
Bazoge would be responsible for the general management and billing of the joint
venture, Mr. Chapuis for “developing and operationalizing R&D”, and Ms.
Posada for “technical R&D”.
[97]
I
accept Mr. Bazoge’s testimony that this meant that he would be responsible for
managing the joint venture and for the academic content of the business
simulations, Mr. Chapuis would be responsible for commercializing adaptations
of the software and ensuring that those adaptations met the pedagogical needs
of IDP, and Ms. Posada’s principal contribution would be to be responsible for
the technical aspects of adapting the simulation software to meet IDP’s needs
(Transcript, January 9, 2013, at pp 90-1). In Ms. Posada’s own words, she “was
responsible for the simulation to work properly” (Transcript, January 8, 2013,
at p 150). This is consistent with the express terms of the 2000 Agreement,
discussed at paragraphs 89 and 90 above.
[98]
I
also accept Mr. Bazoge’s testimony that this is what actually happened after
Ms. Posada joined IDP, and that she was paid primarily to bring her experience
with conceptualizing (as opposed to actually programming) business simulation
software (Transcript, January 9, 2013, at pp 186-7). That said, I recognize
that Ms. Posada also had other responsibilities in IDP, including ensuring that
the software worked properly during seminars, participating in the development
and teaching of the seminars that the three protagonists gave through IDP,
participating in the preparation of transparencies and other teaching aids, and
overseeing the work of programmers who were hired to work on the Software.
[99]
During
the hearing, a significant amount of time was devoted to a disagreement between
the parties as to whether they had agreed, at the time that Ms. Posada became
an employee, shareholder and director of IDP, that POPS would “close,” which I
understood to mean “wind up.” This is important because, if it was generally
understood among the parties that POPS would wind-up its operations when Ms.
Posada joined IDP, the ownership of any adaptations of the Software that were
developed after Ms. Posada became employed by IDP would be less clear than what
it would have been under the two options that were reflected in the
aforementioned e-mail dated November 23, 2006, neither of which appeared to
contemplate the closure of POPS.
[100] I
accept the defendants’ position that, at the time Ms. Posada became an employee
of IDP, it was generally understood among the parties that POPS would wind-up
or at least become dormant and cease activities in respect of Ceres and its
adaptations. In my view, Mr. Bazoge’s testimony in this regard was forthright,
honest and persuasive (see for example, Transcript, January 9, 2013, at pp
92-93 and 122-126). It is also consistent with the fact that POPS’ trade name
was transferred to IDP, and with how things evolved with respect to the issue
of POPS’ closure.
[101] Specifically,
in February 2007, soon after she became an employee of IDP, Ms. Posada met with
her accountant, Mr. Hotte, to discuss, among other things, the closure of POPS.
Mr. Hotte testified that after he identified the tax advantages that would be
associated with taking her capital out of POPS over a period of a few years,
rather than all at once, Ms. Posada and he decided to maintain POPS in a
dormant state for a few years, for that purpose. He also testified that POPS
did not recommence any activities until the end of 2008, after the parties
decided to go their separate ways.
[102] Over
one year later, in an e-mail to Messrs. Chapuis and Bazoge dated April 14,
2008, found at Tab C10 of the parties’ Responses to Undertakings, Ms. Posada
identified two topics “for discussion”. The first concerned her desire to have
POPS’ trade name returned to POPS. She explained that she wanted to be able to
use POPS with her spouse, for the purposes of her research activities and for
certain dealings with the government, for which she needed to transact through
a company. She noted that Mr. Hotte, whom she went to see “to close POPS’
accounts and to do her personal accounting,” had advised her that it made more
sense to do those activities through POPS, than to establish another company.
That said, she stated that IDP could continue to use POPS’ trade name for
billing purposes. She ended that part of her e-mail by asking Messrs. Chapuis
and Bazoge what they thought. In my view, this clearly reflected a prior
understanding to close POPS. This understanding is also reflected in Mr.
Chapuis’ response to that e-mail, in which he stated that he did not have a
problem with what she was proposing to do, so long as POPS didn’t later sue IDP
(presumably, for using POPS’ name), and so long as POPS did not engage in the
same activities as IDP.
[103] Given
all of the foregoing, I have no difficulty in finding that Ms. Posada was hired
by IDP in early 2007 to develop the adaptations of Ceres sought by IDP. This
included completing the work on Omega that the parties had jointly pursued
since at least 1998, and developing the adaptations that would become known as
Comex and Epsilon.
C. What rights, if any, do the
Plaintiffs and IDP have in respect of Ceres, Comex, Epsilon and Omega?
[104] The
Plaintiffs assert that they own the copyright in Ceres, Comex, Epsilon and
Omega.
[105] In
their Amended Statement of Claim, the Plaintiffs also maintain that Messrs.
Chapuis and Bazoge proposed to Ms. Posada in late 2006 that she become a
shareholder in IDP, so that they and IDP could gain access to the Software.
However, during the hearing, and as discussed below, Ms. Posada conceded
that she had previously granted Messrs. Chapuis and Bazoge a licence to use the
Software in their business seminars. She maintained that such licence was
granted without consideration (“à titre gracieux”).
[106] The
Defendants maintain that Comex and Epsilon were entirely developed while Ms.
Posada was an employee of IDP, and that they collaborated in the development of
Omega, before and after Ms. Posada became an employee of IDP. While they do not
assert any copyright in Ceres, Comex, Epsilon or Omega (Transcript, January 8,
2013, at pp 45-46), they claim that they have a licence to use each of those
versions of the Software, pursuant to the terms of either a verbal agreement
with, or an implied licence received from, Ms. Posada or POPS. In the case of
Omega, they assert that their licence was obtained well before Ms. Posada
became an employee of IDP.
[107] Given
the evidence discussed below and in the immediately preceding section above, I
agree with the Defendants’ position on these points. Among other things, the evidence
discussed below demonstrates that:
i)
it
has always been understood between the Parties that the Defendants had and
would continue to have the right to use the Software; and
ii)
the
Defendants have given a significant amount of consideration, over many years,
in exchange for that right to use the Software.
[108] Mr.
Bazoge testified that he began to use Ceres in his capacity as a Professor at
UQAM in 1990, soon after purchasing that software from POPS, on behalf of UQAM,
in September 1989. Mr. Chapuis began to use Ceres the following year,
after purchasing a licence to use Ceres on behalf of the École Supérieure de
Commerce in Tours [ESCT]. In the years that followed, they also began to use
Ceres outside of UQAM and ESCT, as part of a friendly arrangement with Ms.
Posada, pursuant to which Messrs. Bazoge and Chapuis were allowed to use Ceres
in exchange for granting Ms. Posada access to their seminars and the supporting
materials used in those seminars (Interrogatoire après défense de M.
Phillipe Chapuis,
October 20, 2010, at p 51). As confirmed by Ms. Posada, by
approximately 1996, IDP was provided with a version of Ceres that displayed the
IDP logo on certain outputs (Transcript, January 10, 2013, at p 163). An
example of this is a marketing report, dated 2001, which appears at Tab 16 of
the JBD.
[109] During
the discovery phase of this proceeding, Ms. Posada also conceded that she had
verbally granted to IDP the right to use Ceres (see for example, Interrogatoire
avant défense [IAD] de Mme
Elizabeth Posada par Me Simon Grégoire, July 16, 2009, at p 49-52). At one
point, she characterized this right as having been given as “a
sort of commission or whatever, on the sale of a large number of simulations in
France” (IAD, at p 65). This verbal grant of a right to use Ceres and its
adaptations, given during the parties’ collaboration in the 1990s, was also
confirmed by Ms. Posada during the hearing of this proceeding (see for example,
Transcript, January 10, 2013, at pp 165, 167-9 ].
[110] As
discussed at paragraph 88 above, in 1998, the agreement that IDP and POPS
entered into with Vlady specifically provided that “the company IDP Inc. is
invited to participate in the development of the simulation and, in this
capacity, has the right to use [the simulation software] without further
consideration – à
titre gracieux”. Although Vlady subsequently failed to contribute
much to the development of the Software, the fact remains that Ms. Posada, on
behalf of POPS, confirmed in this document her prior verbal grant to IDP of the
right to use the Software. In my view, it was implicit in this contract that
this grant included the right to use any future enhancements of the Software
that resulted from the IDP’s collaboration with Ms. Posada.
[111] This
understanding between the parties is also reflected in the 2000 Agreement,
which may not have been signed, but was acted upon by the parties. As discussed
at paragraphs 89 and 90 above, that agreement provided that “IDP (Philippe et
Benoît) continue to participate in the development of the product (strategy,
marketing, finance).” It also provided that each of POPS and IDP would have the
right to use“[e]ach new version of the simulation (whether named CERES or
otherwise) and each new version of the course materials.”
[112] IDP’s
right to at least use Ceres and its adaptations is also reflected in the
document entitled IDP + POP = IDP, discussed at paragraph 96 above, which
stated that Ms. Posada would receive an equity interest of 25% in IDP, “in
exchange for POPS and the commercial rights to Ceres.” The same is true of the
e-mail dated November 23, 2006, discussed at paragraph 95 above, which
stipulated that “IDP contributes its network and existing clients that use the
simulation,” while “POP [sic] contributes Ceres and Omega at their
future adaptations.” Although the parties ultimately did not pursue the form of
collaboration that would have involved IDP merging with or acquiring POPS, I am
satisfied that it was generally understood between them in February 2007 that
IDP would have the right to continue to use Ceres, and to use Omega and other
future adaptations of the Software, including Epsilon and Comex, in exchange
for ongoing access to IDP’s pedagogical materials and various contributions to
the development of the Software.
[113] As
discussed above, Omega is the Windows version of Ceres that the parties have
been collaborating to develop since at least 1998. Omega permits users to
conduct simulations in four markets (eg, industrial west, industrial east,
consumer west and consumer east). Epsilon (also known as Epsilon 2) is a scaled-down
version of Omega, which only permits users to conduct simulations in two
markets, while Comex (also known as Epsilon 1) is a further scaled-down version
confined to a single market. Comex and Epsilon were developed for use in
relation to small and medium sized businesses, which became an increasing focus
of IDP’s seminars (Transcript, January 9, 2013, at pp 117-118). According to
Mr. Bazoge, whose testimony I accept, each of these versions of the Software
were developed to work with IDP’s pedagogical approach (Interrogatoire après défense, December 1,
2010 [BB IAD], at p 31).
[114] It is common
ground between the parties that all of the development work that has been
performed in respect of Ceres, Omega, Epsilon and Comex over the years has been
confined to input and output files, and has not changed the “core” source code,
or “motor” (including the calculation libraries) developed by Mr. Szendrovits.
[115] Ms.
Posada maintains that Omega had been entirely developed before she became an
employee of IDP. This is disputed by the Defendants, who maintain that it
continued to have many bugs and, to this day, still has not been completed.
They concede that it is possible to use Omega in simulation seminars, but only
if one of Mr. Bazoge, Mr. Chapuis or Ms. Posada is involved in actually
operating the software (Transcript, January 9, 2013, at p 130).
[116] I
accept Ms. Posada’s testimony that she spent hundreds of hours designing and
developing Omega (Transcript, January 8, 2013, at pp 85-86), and that she paid
third parties to assist her in that regard. However, in my view, the evidence
also persuasively establishes that (i) IDP has been intimately involved in the
development of Omega, dating back to at least 1998; (ii) after Ms. Posada
became an employee of IDP, significant development work continued to be
required to enable the parties to productively work with Omega (see, for
example, Transcript, January 9, 2013, at pp 99- 102, 111-112, 129 and 205; and
January 10, 2013, at pp 111 and 116); and (iii) Ms. Posada was paid by IDP to,
among other things, oversee the completion of Omega, which had been the subject
of the parties’ joint collaboration since at least 1998.
[117] Turning
to Epsilon and Comex, it is common ground between the parties that those
versions of the Software were developed to their existing state during the
period that Ms. Posada was employed by IDP. It appears that Comex has never
been operational while Epsilon continues to have many “bugs,” but can be used,
at least by Messrs. Bazoge and Chapuis, and Ms. Posada (Interrogatoire avant
la défense
de Philippe Chapuis, at pp 39-41; BB
IAD, at pp 29-30).
[118] I am
satisfied that the document entitled “BB-E1 Contributions of IDP to the
simulation [software] since 1998”, and addressed in Mr. Bazoge’s testimony
(Transcript, January 9, 2013, at pp 96-100) substantially reflects the
considerable consideration that has been provided by IDP in return for at least
a non-exclusive licence to use Ceres, Omega, Epsilon and Comex. That
consideration can be summarized as follows:
i) ongoing
conceptual contribution to the development of the Software, dating back to the
early 1990s, including during hundreds of meetings that were attended by one or
both of Messrs. Chapuis and Bazoge (see also Transcript, January 9, 2013, at pp
113-116);
ii) extensive
involvement in testing and providing feedback on the various versions of Ceres,
and its adaptations, including Omega, Epsilon and Comex, that have been
developed for use in IDP’s business simulation seminars;
iii) contributing
approximately half of the compensation that was paid to Vlady (Transcript,
January 10, 2013, at p 161);
iv) attending
various meetings to assist with the work that was conducted by Mr. Romero;
v)
developing
various Excel inputs for the Software (Transcript, January 9, 2013, at pp 97
and 102);
vi)
development
of macros related to certain output files of Ceres;
vii)
paying
approximately $59,000 to Ms. Posada to, among other things, oversee the
development of the Software,* while she was employed with IDP; and
viii) paying
Anersys Inc (Mr. Davy Fraser) approximately $6,500 to assist with the
development of Epsilon.
* While BB-E1 indicates that
this salary was paid in respect of Epsilon, I am satisfied that it was also
paid in respect of the other functions that Ms. Posada performed for IDP,
including overseeing the completion of Omega (“making it happen”), and the
functions summarized at paragraph 116 above.
[119] In
addition to the foregoing, other contributions by IDP to the ongoing
development of the Software included developing a printer patch, known as PTR
Laser, to permit Ceres outputs to be printed on a laser printer; and arranging
for various programmers including Messrs. Kogovsek, Mayer, Amado and Trepanier
to test and provide input to Ms. Posada on the Software (Transcript, January 9,
2013, at pp 97-99 and January 10, 2012, at p 14).
[120] Given
all of the foregoing, I am satisfied that Ms. Posada, on behalf of POPS,
granted at least an implied, non-exclusive, licence to IDP to use Ceres and the
various variations and adaptations of Ceres that have been developed or
partially developed by or on behalf of IDP, or in collaboration with IDP (Tremblay
v Orio Canada Inc, 2013 FC 109, at para 53); Robertson v Thompson Corp
(2001), 15 CPR (4th) 147, at para 161; Cselko Associates Inc v
Zellers Inc (1992), 44 CPR (3d) 56, at 59). Indeed, it is arguable that the
1998 written agreement that the parties entered into with Vlady, as well as the
2000 Agreement that was at least verbally agreed upon and then implemented,
conferred an explicit licence to IDP to use the Ceres adaptations that became
Omega, Epsilon and Comex. In light of my finding with respect to the implied
licence that was granted to IDP, it is not necessary to make a definitive
finding regarding the existence of an explicit licence in this regard.
[121] Given
my finding that POPS did not own the copyright in the core source code of Ceres
that was developed by Andrew Szendrovits until it received an assignment of
that copyright from Les Szendrovits in October 2008, POPS granted the
aforementioned implied licence to IDP in its capacity of exclusive distributor
of the software, pursuant to the 1985 Agreement.
[122] In
view of the fact that the Defendants did not assert full or joint ownership
rights in any of the adaptations of Ceres that were developed by or on behalf
of IDP, or by Ms. Posada or POPS in collaboration with IDP, it is not necessary
for me to determine whether IDP or the individual defendants own any copyright
in those adaptations. Indeed, given that those issues were not litigated in
this proceeding, it would not be appropriate for me to do so. However, I am
satisfied that the Defendants have rebutted any presumption of POPS’ ownership
of Epsilon and Comex that may arise by virtue of the fact that POPS registered
ownership in “Epsilon a.k.a. Comex” on August 24, 2010 (Samsonite,
above; Oakley, above). Accordingly, as requested by the Defendants, I
will Order that the Plaintiffs’ Certificate of Registration in respect of
“Epsilon a.k.a. Comex” be struck from the Register of Copyrights.
D. Were the Plaintiffs entitled to
revoke any rights that they may have granted to IDP to use the Software?
[123] On
October 20, 2008, counsel for the Plaintiffs demanded, among other things, that
IDP “immediately cease any and all use, modifications, or any other dealings or
activities with the Software …”
[124] The
Plaintiffs assert that POPS was entitled to revoke the licence that it had
previously granted to IDP to use the Software, because that licence had been
granted for no consideration (“à titre gracieux”), based on the
relationship of good faith and trust that existed between Ms. Posada, Mr.
Chapuis and Mr. Bazoge.
[125] The
Plaintiffs further assert that such licence was predicated upon the recognition
by IDP of POPS’ exclusive ownership of the Software, and upon Ms. Posada’s
continued participation in IDP. They maintain that when Mr. Bazoge wrote to Ms.
Posada to state that he and Mr. Chapuis had taken note of her desire to leave
IDP and proposed that she terminate her involvement in IDP on September 30,
2008, that trust was breached and an important basis upon which IDP’s licence
to use the Software was predicated no longer existed. They add that this trust
was further breached, and that the remaining basis upon which the licence was predicated
ceased to exist, when Mr. Chapuis claimed, in an e-mail dated October 23, 2008
[the Contested E-mail], that the intellectual property rights in Omega, Comex,
Epsilon and variations thereof belonged to IDP.
[126] As a
result of the foregoing, the Plaintiffs maintain that POPS was entitled to
revoke IDP’s licence, because a licence granted without consideration may be
revoked at will. They add that to the extent that the Defendants may be said to
have provided consideration in exchange for their licence to use the Software,
Mr. Chapuis’ declarations (to Mr. Decoste on October 9, 2008 and to Ms. Posada
in the Contested E-mail) of ownership of the Software and his decision (with
Mr. Bazoge) to purchase Ms. Posada’s shares in IDP, constituted a fundamental breach
of the parties’ agreement and entitled her to revoke the licence and to
generally refuse to perform under that agreement.
[127] For
the most part, I disagree with the Plaintiffs’ positions on these points.
[128] As
discussed in the immediately preceding section above, IDP provided substantial
consideration in exchange for an explicit or implied licence to use and to
continue to develop the Software. That consideration was provided pursuant to
an explicit or verbal agreement, and was further evidenced by a course of
conduct pursued by the parties over the course of many years. Accordingly, POPS
was not entitled to unilaterally revoke that licence (Katz (Michael Katz
Associates) v Cytrynbaum (1983), 76 CPR (2s) 276, at para 19 (BCCA), citing
H G Fox, The Canadian Law of Copyright and Industrial Designs, 2d ed (Toronto: Carswell, 1967), at pp 339-340);
see also (J S McKeown, Fox, Canadian Law of Copyright and Industrial Designs, 4th ed, (Toronto: Carswell, 2009) at 19:4(e); and Winter
Garden Theatre v Millenium Products, [1948] A.C.
173, at 193 and 198).
[129] As an
aside, it may be noted that such consideration exceeded, by a very substantial
margin, the $2,000 that Ms. Posada charged for licences to use the Software
until approximately 1996 (it appears that Ms. Posada has not sold any licences
since approximately that time – Transcript, January 10, 2013, at 156),
particularly when one considers the hundreds of meetings attended by Messrs.
Chapuis and Bazoge to contribute to the development of the Software, and their other
very considerable personal efforts to advance the development of the Software
over many years.
[130] With
respect to the allegation that IDP’s licence to use the Software was predicated
on Ms. Posada’s continued involvement in IDP, this was not supported by any
evidence, apart from Ms. Posada’s bald assertions. Based on my review of the
other evidence adduced in this proceeding, there was no such understanding
between the parties. Indeed, from the perspective of IDP, this would not have
made sense, as its considerable investment over many years in the Software
would have been vulnerable to the precise type of unilateral decision to
withdraw from IDP that Ms. Posada made when she informed Mr. Bazoge that she
wanted things to return to “the way they were”, before she joined IDP
(Transcript, January 9, 2013, at p 135-7; see also page 2 of the Contested
E-mail).
[131] I
will now turn to the egregious breach of contract which the Plaintiffs have
alleged on the part of the Defendants. The evidence reviewed in the two
immediately preceding sections above demonstrates that the fundamental terms of
the explicit and implicit agreements between the parties were that IDP would
receive a licence to use and to continue to develop the Software in exchange
for:
i)
contributing in various important ways to the development of the
Software; and
ii)
providing Ms. Posada access to IDP’s pedagogical materials. In my view,
the evidence demonstrates that IDP upheld its side of this bargain.
[132] That
said, it appears to have been always understood between the parties that POPS
or Ms. Posada would retain the copyright in Ceres and Omega. Among other
things, this is reflected in the agreement that was entered into with Vlady in
1998 and in the e-mail dated November 23, 2006 that Mr. Chapuis sent to Ms.
Posada, which are discussed at paragraphs 88-95 above. However, there was no
mention in the latter e-mail or elsewhere of who would own the copyright in
other adaptations of the Software, including Epsilon and Comex. Accordingly,
the situation regarding the ownership of the copyright in those adaptations is
less clear, particularly given the parties’ understanding that POPS would
close, as part of the somewhat different type of collaboration that they
ultimately pursued. This latter fact also raises a question about whether the
parties intended that POPS or Ms. Posada would retain the copyright in Omega,
in the context of the form of collaboration that the parties eventually settled
upon.
[133] Ms.
Posada and Mr. Decoste both testified that they interpreted Mr. Chapuis’
e-mail, dated October 9, 2008 (which is included at p. 164 of the JBD) as
having conveyed the position that he or IDP owned the copyright in the Software
(Transcript, January 8, 2013, at p 167; January 9, 2013, at p 17). However, I
do not find that evidence to be persuasive. Both of them were aware that Mr.
Decoste had been dealing with Mr. Chapuis because Ms. Posada had been on
sabbatical (Transcript, January 9, 2013, at 12). In this context, I find it
difficult to accept their interpretation of Mr. Chapuis’ suggestion to Mr.
Decoste that they meet to try to resolve his problem with the Software before
he left on a six-day trip at the end of that week, because if they did not meet
before that time, Mr. Decoste would have nowhere else to turn, presumably
because no one else would be available to help him.
[134] In my
view, Mr. Chapuis’ e-mail to Mr. Decoste cannot reasonably be construed has
having articulated any claims to the copyright in the Software, and could not
provide a legitimate basis for the purported revocation that was set forth in
her counsel’s letter to the Defendants dated October 20, 2008 (included at Tab
32 of the JBD) and again in a second letter sent by her counsel to the
Defendants, dated October 21, 2008 (included at Tab 33 of the JBD). To the
extent that Mr. Decoste may have been relying on something other than the
aforementioned e-mail to support his belief that Mr. Chapuis had claimed to own
the copyright in Ceres or any of its adaptations, I am not satisfied that any
such claim was ever made to Mr. Decoste by Mr. Chapuis.
[135] It
was not until Mr. Chapuis sent the Contested E-mail on October 23, 2008 that
anyone on behalf of the Defendants raised a question about the ownership of the
Software. That e-mail responded to an e-mail earlier in the day from Ms.
Posada, and to the aforementioned letters from her counsel dated October 20,
2008 and October 21, 2008. In her e-mail, Ms. Posada essentially repeated the
positions taken in her counsel’s letters, to the effect that POPS owned the
rights in the Software and that her collaboration with Messrs. Chapuis and
Bazoge had always been predicated on their recognition of POPS’ rights in the
simulation software.
[136] In
his response, Mr. Chapuis explicitly confirmed that he had never made any claim
to the copyright in Ceres. However, no doubt as a result of the purported
revocation of IDP’s right to use Ceres, he requested that she provide a copy of
the copyright assignment from Andrew Szendrovits or McMaster University. He observed that it would be difficult to negotiate with her in good faith without
such proof, and he wondered why, if she had that proof, she would refrain from
sharing it with him and Mr. Bazoge.
[137] Mr.
Chapuis also observed in that e-mail that Omega, Comex and Epsilon had been
developed over the course of the preceding 18 months by employees of IDP, and
that it was consistent with the law to state that the intellectual property in
that software belonged to IDP. That said, he stated that if she could establish
the contrary, they would have the basis for a useful discussion that could
enrich the meeting that he and Mr. Bazoge hoped to have with her.
[138] In my
view, it is clear from the language in the Contested E-mail that Mr. Chapuis
was simply raising questions that he and Mr. Bazoge understandably wished to
discuss with Ms. Posada, particularly given the position that she had taken
regarding their rights to continue to use the Software. Based on the evidence
adduced in this proceeding, it was entirely legitimate for Mr. Chapuis to raise
those questions.
[139] Contrary
to the assertions of the Plaintiffs, the position taken by Mr. Chapuis in his
e-mail dated October 23, 2008, which formed the basis for the evolving position
that the Defendants took in the ensuing months in the context of settlement
discussions, did not constitute a fundamental or other breach of contract that
may have entitled the Plaintiffs to revoke the licence to use the Software that
they had at least implicitly granted to the Defendants. In my view, the terms
of that licence did not permit the Plaintiffs to revoke the licence for the
reasons that have been advanced by the Plaintiffs. Among other things, such
action on the part of the Plaintiffs was completely inconsistent with the basis
upon which the parties collaborated and with their general course of conduct
over many years. Indeed, the same is true with respect to the Plaintiffs’
withholding from the Defendants of copies of the adaptations of the Software
that Ms. Posada was responsible for developing, on behalf of IDP.
E. Did the Defendants infringe any
copyright that POPS or Ms. Posada may have owned in any versions of the
Software?
[140] Given
my conclusions above, I find that the Defendants did not infringe any copyright
that POPS or Ms. Posada may have owned in any versions of the Software (Ritchie
v Sawmill Creek Golf & Country Club Ltd (2004), 35 CPR (4th)
163, at para 22).
F. Remedies
[141] Given
my conclusions above, the Plaintiffs are not entitled to any damages from the
Defendants, to an accounting for profits, or to any of the other remedies that
they have sought in this proceeding, other than a declaration that they own the
copyright in Ceres.
[142] In
their Re-Re-Amended Counterclaim dated January 11, 2013, the Defendants seek:
i)
The
expungement of the Certificates of Registration of Copyright in the name of
POPS (as owner) and Ms. Posada (as author), in respect of Ceres and “Epsilon
a.k.a. Comex”, respectively;
ii) Confirmation
that IDP, Mr. Bazoge and Mr. Chapuis have a licence in perpetuity to use Ceres,
Omega, Epsilon and Comex for all purposes related to IDP’s pedagogical
activities;
iii) $10,000
in punitive and exemplary damages; and
iv) Solicitor-client
costs in the amount of $100,000.
[143] For
the reasons discussed in section V.A. of these reasons for judgment, the
Defendants’ request that POPS’ Certificate of Registration of Copyright in
respect of Ceres be struck from the Register of Copyrights will be denied.
[144] For
the reasons discussed in Section V.C. of these reasons, the Defendants’ request
that POPS’ Certificate of Registration of Copyright in respect of “Epsilon
a.k.a. Omega” be struck from the Register of Copyrights will be granted.
[145] For
the reasons discussed in Section V.D. of these reasons, the Defendants’ request
for confirmation that IDP has a licence to use Ceres, Omega, Epsilon and Comex
for all purposes related to IDP’s pedagogical activities will be granted.
[146] I
will now turn to the Defendants’ counterclaim for $10,000 in punitive and
exemplary damages.
[147] The
Defendants base their claim for punitive and exemplary damages on, among other
things, (i) the manner in which they were treated by the Plaintiffs from the
time of their dispute until the hearing in this matter, despite the Defendants’
good faith efforts to settle the dispute; and (ii) the refusal of the
Plaintiffs to provide some proof of their ownership of copyright in Ceres
before the hearing in this matter.
[148] Punitive
damages may be awarded in exceptional cases for “malicious, oppressive and
high-handed" misconduct that “offends the court's sense of decency.” This
“test thus limits the award to misconduct that represents a marked departure
from ordinary standards of decent behaviour” (Whiten v
Pilot Insurance Co, 2002
SCC 18, at para 36).
[149] I am very
sympathetic with the Defendants’ claim for punitive and exemplary damages,
particularly given that they did not claim other damages. It is readily
apparent from the evidentiary record that they have suffered significantly from
the course of conduct adopted by Ms. Posada. However, I am not satisfied that
they have established that such conduct meets high test for awarding such
damages.
[150] The
most questionable conduct in this regard included:
i)
the
disingenuously justified purported revocation of the Defendants’ implicit
licence to use the Software, which the Defendants had spent many years helping
to develop, at great expense, in both monetary and non-monetary terms
(Plaintiffs’ letters to the Defendants, beginning on October 20, 2008);
ii) the
repeated threats of legal action against IDP, as well as against Messrs. Bazoge
and Chapuis in their personal capacity, should they continue to use the
Software in their seminars, including in a seminar that had been scheduled for
the first week of November 2008, without first unequivocally acknowledging that
“IDP has absolutely no ownership rights, including copyright, to the source
code of the Software as it existed prior to February 2007, or any of its
versions” (Letter dated October 24, 2008, from Plaintiffs’ counsel to the
Defendants);
iii) the
refusal to meet to discuss the issues in dispute with respect to the Software,
unless the Defendants first expressly recognized within 72 hours the exclusive
ownership of the Software by POPS (Letters dated October 20, 2008 and October
21, 2008, from Plaintiffs’ counsel to the Defendants);
iv) the
refusal to provide any proof of their ownership of the copyright in Ceres,
except before a Court (Letter dated October 31, 2008, from Plaintiffs’ counsel
to the Defendants’ counsel);
v) the
sending of notices to persons with whom IDP was collaborating, informing them,
among other things, that (i) “[c]opyright in the Software is entirely and
exclusively owned by POPS Ltd”, (ii) neither IDP nor Messrs. Bazoge and Chapuis
“have any rights or authority to instruct you as to using or dealing with the
Software in any manner whatsoever”, and (iii) they should immediately cease any
and all use or other dealings or activities with the Software, other than
strictly pursuant to the personal instructions from Elizabeth Posada” (Letters
from the Plaintiffs’ counsel to Ms. Marie-Agnes Chayane and Variem Inc, dated
November 2, 2008);
[151] I
recognize that much of the aforementioned conduct persisted over a significant
period of time and caused great emotional distress and economic harm to the
Defendants, as they substantially scaled down their simulation seminar
activities in the face of the Plaintiffs heavy handed threats. However, in my
view, that conduct did not rise to the exceptional level required to establish
punitive and exemplary damages.
[152] That
said, the conduct unquestionably and significantly increased the costs incurred
by the Defendants to defend this action. This is a factor that I will take
into account in deciding how to allocate the fixed lump sum amount that the
parties agreed upon as representing the legal costs in this proceeding.
VI. Costs
[153] At the end of
the hearing in this matter, I invited the parties to try to reach an agreement
on a lump sum amount of costs to be awarded in this matter, by January 18,
2013. On January 17, 2013, counsel to the Plaintiffs wrote to the Court to
advise, among other things, that the parties had agreed that the costs of these
proceedings can be fixed at the global sum of $20,000.
[154] As reflected in
paragraph 2 of that letter, this agreement was without prejudice to the
Defendants’ request for solicitor-client costs in the amount of $100,000.
[155] For
the reasons set forth below, I am not satisfied that it would be appropriate to
award solicitor-client costs in this case.
[156] Solicitor-client
costs “are very rarely granted” and are generally only awarded if a party
displays “reprehensible, scandalous, or outrageous conduct” or if such costs
are justified by “reasons of public interest” (Quebec
(Attorney General) v Lacombe, 2010
SCC 38, at para 67; Baker v Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1999] 2 S.C.R. 817, at para 77; Young
v Young, [1993] SCJ No 112, at para 251).
[157] In
addition to being exceptional, solicitor-client costs are generally awarded
only in relation to reprehensible, scandalous, or outrageous conduct connected
with the proceeding in which such costs are sought (Apotex Inc v Canada
(Minister of National Health and Welfare), [2000] FCJ No 1919, at paras
7-8).
[158] In Microsoft Corp v 9038-3746 Quebec Inc, 2007
FC 659 at para 16, Justice Harrington defined “reprehensible,” “scandalous” and
“outrageous” as follows:
"Reprehensible"
behaviour is that deserving of censure or rebuke; blameworthy.
"Scandalous" comes from scandal which may describe a person, thing,
event or circumstance causing general public outrage or indignation. Among
other things, "outrageous" behaviour is deeply shocking,
unacceptable, immoral and offensive (see: Oxford Canadian Dictionary).
[159] The
Defendants claimed solicitor-client costs in this matter based on the following
conduct, which they allege was reprehensible:
i)
deliberately
appropriating the copyright in Ceres when they knew that the copyright in the
core source code was held by Mr. Andrew Szendrovits or by McMaster;
ii) cavalierly
persisting in reprehensible conduct from the time the parties dispute erupted,
until trial, including by:
a) sending
a series of heavy handed letters demanding shortly after the dispute between
the parties erupted, in October 2008, demanding, among other things, that the
Defendants cease using the Software;
b) refusing
to produce various documents, such as documents evidencing their ownership of
copyright in Ceres;
c) permitting
the Defendants to invest significant time and money in developing the Software,
without alerting them of the Plaintiffs’ intention to maintain sole ownership
of the copyright in the Software; and
d) refusing
to identify the person who signed the McMaster Assignment on behalf of
McMaster.
iii) knowingly
initiating the action in this matter without any grounds for doing so; and
iv) conducting
themselves in a manner that significantly increased the legal costs incurred by
the Defendants in defending this action.
[160] In
addition, the Defendants claim that it was outrageous for the Plaintiffs to
repeatedly refuse to provide certain documents in response to undertakings, and
to delete certain paragraphs from their Statement of Claim (namely, paragraphs
2 and 56 – 70), after being ordered to do so by Prothonotary Morneau.
[161] It is
immediately apparent that some of the grounds upon which the Defendants have
claimed solicitor-client costs are the same as the grounds upon which they
claimed punitive and exemplary damages, which are discussed at the end of the
immediately preceding section above.
[162] In my view, the
grounds identified by the Defendants do not meet the test of “reprehensible”
“scandalous” or “outrageous” conduct, individually or in aggregate.
[163] Specifically,
with respect to the alleged appropriation of the copyright in Ceres, I am not
satisfied that Ms. Posada knew that copyright in the core source code of Ceres
was still held by Mr. Andrew Szendrovits at the time she requested a
Certificate of Registration, in 1991.
[164] With respect to
the investments in the Software that were made by the Defendants, the
preponderance of the evidence suggests that it was always understood between
the parties that Ms. Posada or POPS would continue to own the copyright in
Ceres, notwithstanding the contributions to the development of Ceres that were
made by the Defendants. (See, for example, the agreement entered into with
Vlady, at Tab 14 of the JBD, and the e-mail dated November 23, 2006, from Mr.
Chapuis to Ms. Posada, at Tab 6 of the JBD). The situation with respect to
Omega, Epsilon and Comex is less clear, and in any event, it is certainly not
sufficiently clear to support the Defendants’ claims to solicitor-client costs.
[165] With
respect to the alleged refusal to produce certain documents, whether in
response to undertakings or otherwise, and the refusal to identify the person
who signed the McMaster Assignment, I am very sympathetic to the Defendants’
claims. I also have no doubt that this conduct contributed to the Defendants’
costs being significantly higher than they otherwise would have been, had the
Plaintiffs conducted themselves in less cavalier and more appropriate manner.
The same is true with respect to the conduct that the Defendants also relied
upon to support their claim for punitive and exemplary damages. Had the parties
not reached an agreement on a lump sum award of costs in this manner, I certainly
would have seriously considered awarding the Defendants a further amount to
reflect these additional costs that they were forced to incur. That said, I am
not satisfied that this conduct rises to the level of being “reprehensible” or
“outrageous”. Indeed, in fairness to the Plaintiffs, there is evidence that
they made some efforts to obtain some of the documents in question, and to
identify the person who signed the McMaster Assignment.
[166] With
respect to the Plaintiffs failure to redact certain paragraphs from their
Amended Statement of Claim, it is not clear to me that this was an intentional
refusal to abide by Prothonotary Morneau’s order.
[167] Finally,
I am not satisfied that the Plaintiffs knowingly initiated this action without
any grounds for doing so. That said, I find it troubling that they continued
the action even after the Mr. Chapuis confirmed, on October 20, 2010, that IDP
was not claiming ownership of any copyright in Ceres (Chapuis IAD, at 48). In
this regard I note that Ms. Posada testified that upon hearing this
confirmation, she and her counsel turned to each other and stated: “Well, why
are we here?”
This is another factor that I have taken into account in determining how to
allocate the fixed lump sum amount that the parties agreed upon as being the
legal costs of this proceeding.
[168] Given the
foregoing, the Defendants’ claim for solicitor-client costs in the amount of
$100,000 will be denied.
[169] However, given
that the Defendants largely prevailed in this action and that the Plaintiffs were
only successful in obtaining confirmation that they own the copyright in Ceres
– something that the Defendants confirmed in October 2010 they were not
asserting on their own behalf, I will award the Defendants’ the full amount of
the fixed lump sum amount of $20,000 that the parties agreed upon. In my view,
this award is particularly appropriate in light of certain conduct engaged in
by the Plaintiffs, discussed above. I am satisfied that such conduct resulted
in significantly increasing the overall costs incurred by the Defendants in
defending this proceeding, relative to the costs they would have incurred had
the Plaintiffs conducted themselves in a more appropriate manner.
JUDGMENT
THIS
COURT DECLARES, ADJUDGES AND ORDERS that:
i)
The
Plaintiff PLANIFICATION-ORGANISATION-PUBLICATIONS SYSTÈMES
(POPS) LTÉE [POPS] is the owner of the copyright in the software known as Ceres,
subject to any rights that may be asserted and established by Mr. Jérôme Doutriaux
and Mr. Jean-Paul Sallenave.
ii)
The
Defendant 9054-8181 QUÉBEC INC. [IDP] has a non-revokable licence to
use Ceres, the adaptations of Ceres known as Omega, Epsilon 1, Epsilon 2 and
Comex, and any future adaptations of those software products that may be
developed by or on behalf of IDP, for all purposes related to IDP’s pedagogical
activities, namely, pedagogical seminars. For greater certainty, pedagogical
activities for this purpose do not include the assignment, licensing or other
transfer of, or access to, such software to anyone other than IDP and those of
its principals, managers, employees or independent contractors who need to have
access to the aforementioned software products to give effect to this Order.
iii)
The
Defendants did not infringe the POPS’ copyright in Ceres or any copyright that
POPS or Ms. Elizabeth Posada may have in any of Ceres’ adaptations, as alleged
in the Plaintiffs’ Amended Statement of Claim, dated June 29, 2009 [ASC].
iv)
The
Certificate of Registration of Copyright, dated August 24, 2010, and identified
by the registration number 1079833, in respect of “Epsilon a.k.a. Comex,” which
identifies POPS as the owner and Elizabeth Posada as the author, shall be
struck from the Register of Copyrights.
v)
The
Plaintiffs are not entitled to damages, an accounting for profits or any of the
other relief that they claimed in paragraphs 1(a)(iii),1(b) - (l) of their ASC.
vi)
The
Plaintiffs shall forthwith pay costs in the amount of $20,000 to IDP.
vii)
The
Defendants are not entitled to punitive and exemplary damages or to
solicitor-client costs, as alleged in their Re-Re-Amended Statement of Defence
and Counterclaim, dated January 11, 2013.
viii)
The
Plaintiffs shall provide to IDP within 30 days of the date of this Judgment
copies of the most recent versions of Ceres, Omega, Comex and Epsilon,
including the source code, that were developed between 1998 and the
effective date on which Ms. Posada ceased to be an employee of IDP, and any
prior versions of such software that the defendants may identify and request in
writing from the Plaintiffs within 30 days of the date of this Order, and that
are reasonably available to the Plaintiffs.
"Paul S.
Crampton"