SUPREME
COURT OF CANADA
Between:
Society
of Composers, Authors and Music Publishers of Canada, Canadian Recording
Industry Association and CMRRA-SODRAC Inc.
Appellants
and
Bell
Canada, Apple Canada Inc., Rogers Communications Inc., Rogers Wireless
Partnership, Shaw Cablesystems G.P., TELUS Communications Inc., Entertainment
Software Association and Entertainment Software Association of Canada
Respondents
-
and -
Samuelson-Glushko
Canadian Internet Policy and Public Interest Clinic, Canadian Association of
University Teachers, Federation of Law Societies of Canada, Canadian Legal
Information Institute and Computer & Communications Industry Association
Interveners
Coram: McLachlin C.J. and LeBel, Deschamps, Fish, Abella, Rothstein,
Cromwell, Moldaver and Karakatsanis JJ.
Reasons
for Judgment:
(paras. 1 to 50)
|
Abella J. (McLachlin C.J. and LeBel,
Deschamps, Fish, Rothstein, Cromwell, Moldaver and Karakatsanis JJ.
concurring)
|
Society of Composers, Authors and Music Publishers of Canada v.
Bell Canada, 2012 SCC 36, [2012] 2 S.C.R. 326
Society of Composers, Authors and Music
Publishers of Canada,
Canadian Recording Industry Association
and
CMRRA‑SODRAC
Inc. Appellants
v.
Bell Canada,
Apple Canada Inc.,
Rogers Communications Inc., Rogers
Wireless Partnership,
Shaw Cablesystems G.P., TELUS
Communications Inc.,
Entertainment Software Association and
Entertainment
Software Association of Canada Respondents
and
Samuelson‑Glushko Canadian
Internet Policy and Public Interest Clinic,
Canadian Association of University
Teachers,
Federation of Law Societies of Canada,
Canadian Legal Information Institute and
Computer
& Communications Industry Association Interveners
Indexed as: Society of Composers, Authors and Music Publishers of
Canada v. Bell Canada
2012 SCC 36
File No.: 33800.
2011: December 6; 2012: July 12.
Present: McLachlin C.J. and LeBel, Deschamps, Fish, Abella,
Rothstein, Cromwell, Moldaver and Karakatsanis JJ.
on appeal from the federal court of appeal
Intellectual
property — Copyright — Infringement — Exception — Fair dealing — Online music
service providers giving customers the ability to listen to free previews of
musical works prior to purchase of musical works — Collective society seeking
to collect royalties for use of previews — Whether the use of previews
constitutes “fair dealing” — Copyright Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C‑42, s. 29 .
S
represents composers, authors and music publishers and administers their
performing and communication rights. S filed proposed tariffs with the
Copyright Board for the determination of royalties to be paid when musical
works are communicated to the public over the Internet. The Board agreed that
S was entitled to collect royalties for the downloading of musical works but
not for previews, which consist of 30‑ to 90‑second excerpts of
musical works that can be listened to by consumers prior to purchasing the
work. In the Board’s view, the use of previews was not an infringement of
copyright since it was “fair dealing” for the purpose of research under
s. 29 of the Copyright Act , and, accordingly, no royalties were required
to be paid to S. The Federal Court of Appeal upheld the Board’s decision.
Held:
The appeal should be dismissed.
Fair
dealing allows users to engage in activities that might otherwise amount to
copyright infringement. The purpose of the fair dealing analysis under the Copyright
Act is to determine whether the proper balance has been achieved between
protection of the exclusive rights of authors and copyright owners and access to
their works by the public.
The
test for fair dealing was articulated in CCH Canadian Ltd. v. Law
Society of Upper Canada, and involves two steps. The first step is to
determine whether the dealing is for the purpose of either “research” or
“private study”, the two allowable purposes listed under s. 29 of the Copyright
Act . The second step assesses whether the dealing is “fair”.
The
first inquiry in this case is whether the previews are provided for the
allowable purpose of “research” under the first step of the fair dealing test. The
purpose of “research” should be analyzed from the perspective of the consumer
as the ultimate user, not the online service provider. The Board properly
considered the previews from the perspective of the consumer’s purpose, namely,
conducting research to identify which music to purchase.
“Research”
need not be for creative purposes only. Permitting only creative purposes to
qualify as “research” would ignore the fact that one of the objectives of the Copyright
Act is the dissemination of the works themselves. Limiting “research” to
creative purposes would also run counter to the ordinary meaning of “research”,
which includes many activities that do not require the establishment of new
facts or conclusions. The fair dealing exception must not be interpreted
restrictively and “research” must be given a large and liberal interpretation.
The
inquiry then moves to the second step set out in CCH, namely,
determining whether the use of previews was “fair”. The factors to be
considered in determining whether a dealing is fair are the purpose, character,
and amount of the dealing; the existence of any alternatives to the dealing;
the nature of the work; and the effect of the dealing on the work.
The
Board properly concluded that previews constituted fair dealing. The guiding
perspective is that of the ultimate user or consumer. The service providers facilitate
the research purposes of the consumers. There are reasonable safeguards in
place to ensure that the previews are being used for this purpose.
With
respect to the character of the dealing, users do not keep a permanent copy of
the preview, since the file is streamed and automatically deleted from the user’s
computer once the preview is heard. As a result, copies cannot be duplicated
or further disseminated.
The
“amount of the dealing” factor should not be assessed on the basis of the
aggregate number of previews that are streamed by consumers. This factor
should be assessed by looking at the proportion of the preview in relation to
the whole work, not the aggregate amount of music heard through previews. Streaming a preview of several seconds is a modest amount when compared to
the whole work.
Under
the remaining factors, there are no alternatives to the dealing that as
effectively demonstrate to a consumer what a musical work sounds like.
Previews are therefore reasonably necessary to help consumers research what to
purchase. Unless a potential customer can locate and identify the work he or
she wants to buy, the work will not be disseminated. Short, low‑quality
previews do not compete with, or adversely affect, the downloading of the works
themselves. Instead, their effect is to increase the sale and dissemination of
copyrighted musical works.
The
previews therefore constitute fair dealing under the Copyright Act .
Cases Cited
Referred
to: Rogers Communications Inc. v. Society of Composers, Authors and
Music Publishers of Canada, 2012 SCC 35, [2012] 2 S.C.R. 283; CCH
Canadian Ltd. v. Law Society of Upper Canada, 2004 SCC 13, [2004] 1 S.C.R.
339; Théberge v. Galerie d’Art du Petit Champlain inc., 2002 SCC 34, [2002]
2 S.C.R. 336; Bishop v. Stevens, [1990] 2 S.C.R. 467; United States
v. American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers, 599 F.Supp.2d 415
(2009); Campbell v. Acuff‑Rose Music, Inc., 510 U.S. 569 (1994); Compo
Co. v. Blue Crest Music Inc., [1980] 1 S.C.R. 357; Century 21 Canada Limited
Partnership v. Rogers Communications Inc., 2011 BCSC 1196, 338 D.L.R. (4th)
32; Hubbard v. Vosper, [1972] 1 All E.R. 1023; Robertson v. Thomson
Corp., 2006 SCC 43, [2006] 2 S.C.R. 363.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
17 U.S.C. § 107 (2006).
Copyright Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C‑42,
ss. 29 , 29.1 , 29.2 .
Authors Cited
Craig, Carys J. “Locke, Labour and Limiting the Author’s
Right: A Warning against a Lockean Approach to Copyright Law” (2002), 28 Queen’s
L.J. 1.
D’Agostino, Giuseppina. “Healing Fair Dealing? A Comparative
Copyright Analysis of Canada’s Fair Dealing to U.K. Fair Dealing and U.S. Fair
Use” (2008), 53 McGill L.J. 309.
Drassinower, Abraham. “Taking User Rights Seriously”, in Michael
Geist, ed., In the Public Interest: The Future of Canadian Copyright Law.
Toronto: Irwin Law, 2005, 462.
Vaver, David. Intellectual Property Law: Copyright, Patents,
Trade‑marks, 2nd ed. Toronto: Irwin Law, 2011.
APPEAL
from a judgment of the Federal Court of Appeal (Létourneau, Nadon and Pelletier JJ.A.),
2010 FCA 123, 403 N.R. 57, 320 D.L.R. (4th) 342, 83 C.P.R. (4th) 409, [2010]
F.C.J. No. 570 (QL), 2010 CarswellNat 1333, affirming a decision of the
Copyright Board, www.cb-cda.gc.ca/decisions/2007/20071018-m-e.pdf, (2007), 61
C.P.R. (4th) 353, [2007] C.B.D. No. 7 (QL), 2007 CarswellNat 3466. Appeal
dismissed.
Henry Brown, Q.C.,
Gilles M. Daigle, Paul Spurgeon and Matthew S.
Estabrooks, for the appellant the Society of Composers, Authors and Music
Publishers of Canada.
Glen A. Bloom,
for the appellant the Canadian Recording Industry Association.
Casey M. Chisick, Timothy Pinos and Jason Beitchman, for the appellant
CMRRA‑SODRAC Inc.
Gerald L. Kerr‑Wilson, Ariel A. Thomas and Julia Kennedy, for the
respondents Bell Canada, Rogers Communications Inc., Rogers Wireless
Partnership, Shaw Cablesystems G.P. and TELUS Communications Inc.
Michael Koch, for
the respondent Apple Canada Inc.
No
one appeared for the respondents the Entertainment Software Association and the
Entertainment Software Association of Canada.
David Fewer and Jeremy
de Beer, for the intervener the Samuelson‑Glushko Canadian Internet
Policy and Public Interest Clinic.
Wendy Matheson, Andrew
Bernstein and Alexandra Peterson, for the intervener the Canadian
Association of University Teachers.
Ronald E. Dimock and Sangeetha Punniyamoorthy, for the interveners the Federation
of Law Societies of Canada and the Canadian Legal Information Institute.
Andrea Rush, for the
intervener the Computer & Communications Industry Association.
The judgment of the Court was
delivered by
[1]
Abella J. — The purchase of musical works is increasingly carried out over
the Internet. Some commercial Internet sites that sell music allow consumers
to preview musical works before making a purchase. The issue in this case is
whether those previews constitute “fair dealing” under s. 29 of the Copyright
Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C‑42 .
Background
[2]
The Society of Composers, Authors and Music
Publishers of Canada (SOCAN) represents composers, authors and music publishers
and administers their performing and communication rights. Its arguments
before this Court were supported by the Canadian Recording Industry Association
and CMRRA-SODRAC Inc.
[3]
Bell Canada, Apple Canada Inc., Rogers
Communications Inc., Rogers Wireless Partnership, Shaw Cablesystems G.P. and
TELUS Communications Inc. operate online music services that sell downloads of
digital files of musical works. These services provide catalogues of digital
audio files that allow users to identify musical works by title, album, genre
and artist. The service providers also give consumers the ability to listen to
free “previews” of those works before deciding which work to purchase. SOCAN
seeks compensation for the provision of those previews over and beyond what
would normally be paid for a music download or a CD.
[4]
A preview consists of an extract taken from the
work, usually 30 to 90 seconds of a musical track. Users are able to select
and listen to the preview through an online “stream”, meaning that a temporary
copy of the excerpt is heard by the user in such a way that his or her computer
does not store a permanent copy of the preview. The previews help users decide
whether to purchase a permanent download of the work. Apple’s iTunes service,
for example, allows consumers to listen to previews as many times as they want,
whether or not they make a purchase or have registered with the online service
provider.
[5]
As noted in the companion appeal (Rogers
Communications Inc. v. Society of Composers, Authors and Music Publishers of
Canada, [2012] 2 S.C.R. 283), SOCAN filed proposed tariffs targeting
the years 1996 to 2006 with the Copyright Board of Canada in 1995 for the
determination of royalties to be paid by users when musical works are
communicated to the public over the Internet.
[6]
In a decision released on October 18, 2007 (61
C.P.R. (4th) 353), the Board agreed that SOCAN was entitled to collect
royalties for the downloading of musical works, but not for previews. In the
Board’s view, the use of previews was not an infringement of copyright since
their use was “fair dealing” for the purpose of research under s. 29 of the Copyright
Act based on the factors identified by McLachlin C.J. in CCH Canadian
Ltd. v. Law Society of Upper Canada, [2004] 1 S.C.R. 339. Because the
previews were not an infringement of copyright, no royalties were required to
be paid to SOCAN for their use.
[7]
The Federal Court of Appeal upheld the Board’s
decision (2010 FCA 123, 403 N.R. 57). As would I.
Analysis
[8]
In Théberge v. Galerie d’Art du Petit
Champlain inc., [2002] 2 S.C.R. 336, this Court noted that copyright
requires “a balance between promoting the public interest in the encouragement
and dissemination of works of the arts and intellect and obtaining a just
reward for the creator” (para. 30).
[9]
Théberge reflected
a move away from an earlier, author-centric view which focused on the exclusive
right of authors and copyright owners to control how their works were used in
the marketplace: see e.g. Bishop v. Stevens, [1990] 2 S.C.R. 467, at pp.
478-79. Under this former framework, any benefit the public might derive from
the copyright system was only “a fortunate by-product of private entitlement”:
Carys J. Craig, “Locke, Labour and Limiting the Author’s Right: A Warning
against a Lockean Approach to Copyright Law” (2002), 28 Queen’s L.J. 1,
at pp. 14-15.
[10]
Théberge focused
attention instead on the importance copyright plays in promoting the public
interest, and emphasized that the dissemination of artistic works is central to
developing a robustly cultured and intellectual public domain. As noted by
Professor David Vaver, both protection and access must be sensitively balanced
in order to achieve this goal: Intellectual Property
Law: Copyright, Patents, Trade-marks (2nd
ed. 2011), at p. 60.
[11]
CCH confirmed
that users’ rights are an essential part of furthering the public interest
objectives of the Copyright Act . One of the tools employed to
achieve the proper balance between protection and access in the Act is
the concept of fair dealing, which allows users to engage in some activities
that might otherwise amount to copyright infringement. In order to maintain
the proper balance between these interests, the fair dealing provision “must
not be interpreted restrictively”: CCH, at para. 48.
[12]
CCH sets out the
test for fair dealing under s. 29 of the Copyright Act :
29. Fair
dealing for the purpose of research or private study does not infringe
copyright.
While not specifically in
issue in the case before us, ss. 29.1 and 29.2 of the Act also permit
“fair dealing” for the purposes of criticism, review or news reporting.
[13]
The test for fair dealing articulated in CCH
involves two steps. The first is to determine whether
the dealing is for the purpose of either “research” or “private study”, the two
allowable purposes listed under s. 29 . The second step assesses whether the
dealing is “fair”. The onus is on the person invoking “fair dealing” to
satisfy both aspects of the test under CCH.
[14]
To assist in determining whether the dealing is
“fair”, this Court set out the following six fairness factors for guidance: the
purpose, character, and amount of the dealing; the existence of any
alternatives to the dealing; the nature of the work; and the effect of the
dealing on the work.
[15]
The first inquiry in this case, therefore, is
whether previews are provided for the allowable purpose of “research” under the
first step of the CCH fair dealing test. While CCH did not
define the word “research”, it notably concluded that “‘[r]esearch’ must be
given a large and liberal interpretation in order to ensure that users’ rights
are not unduly constrained” (para. 51).
[16]
The Board defined “previews” as
a
marketing tool offered by online music services, among others. A preview is an
excerpt (usually 30 seconds or less) of a sound recording that can be streamed
so that consumers are allowed to “preview” the recording to help them decide
whether to purchase a (usually permanent) download. [para. 18]
[17]
Based on the evidence it heard about the purpose
of previews and the way they were used by consumers, the Board concluded that
previews were used “either to determine whether the track suits the user’s
tastes or to verify that the track is the one the user wants to buy” (para.
101). Listening to previews helped users identify what music to purchase.
Since planning the purchase of a download involved “searching [and]
investigation”, the Board was of the view that previews amounted to “research”
under s. 29 of the Copyright Act (para. 109).
[18]
The Federal Court of Appeal endorsed the Board’s
view that listening to previews was part of planning the purchase of a download
of a musical work and was therefore “for the purpose of research”, concluding:
.
. . it would not be unreasonable to give the word “research” its primary and
ordinary meaning. The consumer is searching for an object of copyright that he
or she desires and is attempting to locate and wishes to ensure its
authenticity and quality before obtaining it. . . . “[L]istening to previews
assists in this investigation”. [para. 20]
[19]
SOCAN argued that the Board and the Federal
Court of Appeal misinterpreted the term “research” in two ways. It argued
first that their interpretation of “research” was overly broad. Its second
argument was that the purpose of “research” should have been analysed from the
perspective of the online service provider and not the consumer. From this
perspective, the purpose of the previews was not “research”, but to sell
permanent downloads of the musical works.
[20]
SOCAN offers the definition of “research” as
being “the systematic investigation into and study of materials and sources in
order to establish facts and reach new conclusions” (A.F., at para. 96).
Moreover, SOCAN argues, the goal of the “research” must be for the purpose of
making creative works, since only uses that contribute to the creative process
are in the public interest. As a result, previews do not amount to “research”
since their primary purpose is not to foster creativity, but to enable users to
purchase music online.
[21]
It is true that an important goal of fair
dealing is to allow users to employ copyrighted works in a way that helps them
engage in their own acts of authorship and creativity: Abraham Drassinower,
“Taking User Rights Seriously”, in Michael Geist, ed., In the Public
Interest: The Future of Canadian Copyright Law (2005), 462, at pp. 467-72.
But that does not argue for permitting only creative purposes to qualify
as “research” under s. 29 of the Copyright Act . To do so would ignore
the fact that the dissemination of works is also one of the Act’s
purposes, which means that dissemination too, with or without creativity, is in
the public interest. It would also ignore that “private study”, a concept that
has no intrinsic relationship with creativity, was also expressly included as
an allowable purpose in s. 29 . Since “research” and “private study” both
qualify as fair dealing purposes under s. 29 , we should not interpret the term
“research” more restrictively than “private study”.
[22]
Limiting research to creative purposes would
also run counter to the ordinary meaning of “research”, which can include many
activities that do not demand the establishment of new facts or conclusions.
It can be piecemeal, informal, exploratory, or confirmatory. It can in fact be
undertaken for no purpose except personal interest. It is true that research
can be for the purpose of reaching new conclusions, but this should be seen as
only one, not the primary component of the definitional framework.
[23]
In urging the Court to narrow the definition of
“research” as requiring the creation of something new, SOCAN relied on American
jurisprudence which looks to the requirement of a “transformative” purpose
before the use is seen as fair. It cited as an example United States v.
American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers, 599 F.Supp.2d 415
(2009), where the New York District Court held that the use of music previews
as a marketing tool to sell musical ringtones was not “transformative” in
nature and therefore could not be fairly described as “criticism, comment, news
reporting . . . or research” under the fair use provisions in Title 17, § 107 of the U.S. Code, at pp. 424-25.
[24]
The American approach is called “fair use”. The
U.S. Code provisions create an open set of purposes for fair use which include
criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, or research: 17
U.S.C. § 107. The analysis
proceeds straight to the assessment of fairness, an assessment based on factors
enumerated in the Code or established by the case law. Although one of those
fairness factors includes whether the use is transformative, it is not at all
clear that a transformative use is “absolutely necessary” for a finding of fair
use: Campbell v. Acuff-Rose Music, Inc., 510 U.S. 569 (1994), at p.
579.
[25]
But even if it were a requirement under American
law, this Court has previously cautioned against the automatic portability of
American copyright concepts into the Canadian arena, given the “fundamental
differences” in the respective legislative schemes: Compo Co. v. Blue Crest
Music Inc., [1980] 1 S.C.R. 357, at p. 367. This caution has resonance in
the fair dealing context.
[26]
Unlike the American approach of proceeding
straight to the fairness assessment, we do not engage in the fairness analysis
in Canada until we are satisfied that the dealing is for one of the allowable
purposes enumerated in the Copyright Act . Under the test set out in CCH,
“fairness” is not considered until the second step of the test for fair
dealing: see CCH, at para. 51; see also Giuseppina D’Agostino, “Healing
Fair Dealing? A Comparative Copyright Analysis of Canada’s Fair Dealing to U.K.
Fair Dealing and U.S. Fair Use” (2008), 53 McGill L.J. 309, and Century
21 Canada Limited Partnership v. Rogers Communications Inc., 2011 BCSC
1196, 338 D.L.R. (4th) 32, at para. 234.
[27]
In mandating a generous interpretation of the
fair dealing purposes, including “research”, the Court in CCH created a
relatively low threshold for the first step so that the analytical
heavy-hitting is done in determining whether the dealing was fair. SOCAN’s
submission that “research” be restricted to the creation of new works would
conflate the allowable purpose with the fairness analysis and unduly raise the
bar for entering that analysis. Moreover, its restricted definitional scope of
“research” contradicts not only the Court’s admonition in CCH that “[i]n
order to maintain the proper balance between the rights of a copyright owner
and users’ interests, [the fair dealing exception] must not be interpreted
restrictively” (para. 48), but also its direction that the term “research” be
given a “large and liberal interpretation” so that in maintaining that balance,
users’ rights are not unduly constrained (paras. 48 and 51).
[28]
SOCAN’s proposed definition of “research” as
requiring “systematic investigation” and “new conclusions” is also at odds with
its second submission about “research”, namely, that “research” be analysed
from the perspective of the purpose of the online service providers, and not
that of the users. But its own proposed definition shows that it sees research
as a user-focused undertaking, since the investigation and creation of
new conclusions are clearly done by a user, not a provider. The
provider’s purpose in making the works available is therefore not the relevant
perspective at the first stage of the fair dealing analysis.
[29]
This is consistent with the Court’s approach in CCH,
where it described fair dealing as a “user’s right” (para. 48). In CCH,
the Great Library was the provider, offering a photocopying service to lawyers
requesting copies of legal materials. The Court did not focus its inquiry on
the library’s perspective, but on that of the ultimate user, the lawyers, whose
purpose was legal research (para. 64).
[30]
Similarly, in considering whether previews are
for the purpose of “research” under the first step of CCH, the Board
properly considered them from the perspective of the user or consumer’s
purpose. And from that perspective, consumers used the previews for the
purpose of conducting research to identify which music to purchase, purchases
which trigger dissemination of musical works and compensation for their
creators, both of which are outcomes the Act seeks to encourage.
[31]
The inquiry then moves to the second step,
namely, determining whether the use of previews was “fair” in accordance with
the CCH factors.
[32]
Whether something is “fair” is a question of
fact and depends on the facts of each case: CCH, at para. 52,
citing Hubbard v. Vosper, [1972] 1 All E.R. 1023 (C.A.), at p. 1027.
Based on all the factors, the Board concluded, properly in my view, that
previews amounted to fair dealing.
[33]
The first factor identified in CCH is the
purpose of the dealing, where an objective assessment is made of the “real
purpose or motive” behind using the copyrighted work (para. 54).
[34]
SOCAN argued that the purpose of the previews in
this case was purely commercial. This is an approach that looks at the purpose
of the previews from the perspective not of the consumer, but of the service
providers. I agree instead with the Board and the Federal Court of Appeal that the predominant perspective in this case is that of the
ultimate users of the previews, and their purpose in using previews was
to help them research and identify musical works for online purchase. While the service providers sell musical downloads, the purpose of
providing previews is primarily to facilitate the research purposes of
the consumers.
[35]
The Board also noted
that there were reasonable safeguards in place to ensure that the users’
dealing in previews was in fact being used for this purpose: the previews were
streamed, short, and often of lesser quality than the musical work itself.
These safeguards prevented the previews from replacing the work while still
fulfilling a research function.
[36]
SOCAN also argued that even from the perspective
of the consumers, the purpose of the previews was purely commercial, since
their purpose was the potential purchase of musical works. Ultimately,
however, the Board’s approach is consistent with CCH’s observation that
while research done for commercial reasons may be less fair than research done
for non-commercial purposes (para. 54), the dealing may nonetheless be fair if
there are “reasonable safeguards” in place to ensure that the works are
actually being used for research (para. 66).
[37]
The second factor discussed in CCH is the
character of the dealing. The Court stated that a particular dealing might be
unfair if multiple copies of works are being widely distributed (para. 55).
But as the Court also pointed out, if a single copy of a work is used for a
specific legitimate purpose, or if the copy no longer existed after it was
used, this would favour a finding of fairness (para. 55).
[38]
SOCAN’s argument was based on the fact that
consumers accessed, on average, 10 times the number of previews as full-length
musical works. However, no copy existed after the preview was heard. The
previews were streamed, not downloaded. Users did not get a permanent copy,
and once the preview was heard, the file was automatically deleted from the
user’s computer. The fact that each file was automatically deleted meant that
copies could not be duplicated or further disseminated by users.
[39]
The third factor identified in CCH is the
amount — or quantity — of the dealing. The Board
characterized the “amount” of the dealing in terms of the length of each
preview compared to the length of the work, concluding that streaming a preview
of about 30 seconds was a modest dealing “when compared to purchasing the whole
work [approximately four minutes] for repeated listening” (para. 113).
[40]
SOCAN argued, however, that the proportion of
the preview in relation to the length of the whole musical work was not the
proper measure, and that the Board should have considered instead the aggregate
number of previews that are streamed by consumers. Since the evidence showed
that each user, on average, listened to 10 previews before purchasing a musical
work for download, the overall amount of time spent listening to previews was
so large that the dealing was unfair. SOCAN saw this factor as determinative
in this case.
[41]
There is no doubt that the aggregate quantity of
music heard through previews is significant, but SOCAN’s argument conflicts
with the Court’s statement in CCH that “amount” means the “quantity of
the work taken” (para. 56). Since fair dealing is a “user’s” right, the
“amount of the dealing” factor should be assessed based on the individual use,
not the amount of the dealing in the aggregate. The appropriate measure under
this factor is therefore, as the Board noted, the proportion of the excerpt
used in relation to the whole work. That, it seems to me, is consistent with
the Court’s approach in CCH, where it considered the Great Library’s
dealings by looking at its practices as they related to specific works
requested by individual patrons, not at the total number of patrons or pages
requested. The “amount of the dealing” factor should therefore be assessed by
looking at how each dealing occurs on an individual level, not on the aggregate
use.
[42]
Moreover, the quantification of the aggregate
dissemination is already considered under the “character of the dealing”
factor, which examines whether multiple copies of works are being widely
distributed. Reconsidering the same “aggregate” quantity under the “amount”
factor would deprive that factor of any utility in the analysis, and would
erase consideration of the proportion of the excerpt to the entire work.
[43]
Further, given the ease and magnitude with which
digital works are disseminated over the Internet, focusing on the “aggregate”
amount of the dealing in cases involving digital works could well lead to
disproportionate findings of unfairness when compared with non-digital works.
If, as SOCAN urges, large-scale organized dealings are inherently unfair, most
of what online service providers do with musical works would be treated as
copyright infringement. This, it seems to me, potentially undermines the goal
of technological neutrality, which seeks to have the Copyright Act
applied in a way that operates consistently, regardless of the form of media
involved, or its technological sophistication: Robertson v. Thomson Corp.,
[2006] 2 S.C.R. 363, at para. 49.
[44]
The fourth factor identified in CCH involves considering any
alternatives to the dealing. A dealing may be less fair if there is a
non-copyrighted equivalent of the work that could have been used, or if the
dealing was not reasonably necessary to achieve the ultimate purpose (para.
57).
[45]
SOCAN argued that there were other methods
available, like advertising, to help users identify potential music for purchase.
Many of the service providers, for example, offered album
artwork, textual descriptions, and user-generated album reviews. In addition,
some service providers offered return policies in the event that users
accidentally downloaded the wrong musical work.
[46]
But allowing returns is an expensive,
technologically complicated, and market-inhibiting alternative for helping
consumers identify the right music. And none of the other suggested alternatives can demonstrate to a
consumer what previews can, namely, what a musical work sounds like.
The Board found that “[l]istening to a preview probably is the most practical,
most economical and safest way for users to ensure that they purchase what they
wish” (para. 114). As a result, it concluded that short, low-quality streamed
previews are reasonably necessary to help consumers research what to purchase.
I agree.
[47]
The fifth factor is the nature of the work,
which examines whether the work is one which should be widely disseminated.
SOCAN does not dispute the desirability of the sale and dissemination of
musical works, but argues that since these works are easily purchased and
disseminated without the use of previews, previews are of no additional benefit
to promoting further dissemination. But the fact that a musical work is widely
available does not necessarily correlate to whether it is widely disseminated.
Unless a potential consumer can locate and identify a work he or she wants to
buy, the work will not be disseminated.
[48]
This observation is linked to the final factor:
the effect of the dealing on the work and whether the dealing adversely affects
or competes with the work. Because of their short duration and degraded
quality, it can hardly be said that previews are in competition with downloads
of the work itself. And since the effect of previews is to increase the
sale and therefore the dissemination of copyrighted musical works thereby
generating remuneration to their creators, it cannot be said that they have a
negative impact on the work.
[49]
All of this confirms the Board’s conclusion that
previews satisfy the requirements of fair dealing and that the online service
providers do not infringe copyright. In so concluding, the Board properly
balanced the purposes of the Act by encouraging the creation and dissemination
of works while at the same time ensuring that creators are fairly rewarded.
Its approach was consistent with CCH, with the interpretative principles
it set out, and with its test for fair dealing under s. 29 of the Copyright
Act . The conclusion, as a result, should not be disturbed.
[50]
I would dismiss the appeal with costs.
Appeal
dismissed with costs.
Solicitors
for the appellant the Society of Composers, Authors and Music Publishers of
Canada: Gowling Lafleur Henderson, Ottawa.
Solicitors
for the appellant the Canadian Recording Industry Association: Osler,
Hoskin & Harcourt, Ottawa.
Solicitors
for the appellant CMRRA‑SODRAC Inc.: Cassels Brock &
Blackwell, Toronto.
Solicitors
for the respondents Bell Canada, Rogers Communications Inc., Rogers Wireless
Partnership, Shaw Cablesystems G.P. and TELUS Communications Inc.: Fasken
Martineau DuMoulin, Ottawa.
Solicitors
for the respondent Apple Canada Inc.: Goodmans, Toronto.
Solicitor
for the intervener the Samuelson‑Glushko Canadian Internet Policy and
Public Interest Clinic: University of Ottawa, Ottawa.
Solicitors
for the intervener the Canadian Association of University Teachers: Torys,
Toronto.
Solicitors
for the interveners the Federation of Law Societies of Canada and the Canadian
Legal Information Institute: Dimock Stratton, Toronto.
Solicitors for the
intervener the Computer & Communications Industry Association: Heenan
Blaikie, Toronto.