SUPREME
COURT OF CANADA
Between:
Canadian
Broadcasting Corporation
Appellant
and
SODRAC
2003 Inc. and Society for Reproduction Rights of Authors,
Composers
and Publishers in Canada (SODRAC) Inc.
Respondents
- and -
Centre
for Intellectual Property Policy, Ariel Katz,
Samuelson-Glushko
Canadian Internet Policy and Public Interest Clinic,
Canadian
Musical Reproduction Rights Agency Ltd., Canadian Music Publishers Association,
International Confederation of Music Publishers, Music Canada,
International
Federation of the Phonographic Industry, Canadian Council of
Music
Industry Associations, Canadian Independent Music Association and
Association
québécoise de l’industrie du disque, du spectacle et de la vidéo
Interveners
Coram: McLachlin C.J. and Abella, Rothstein, Cromwell, Moldaver,
Karakatsanis, Wagner, Gascon and Côté JJ.
Reasons
for Judgment:
(paras. 1 to 116)
Dissenting
Reasons:
(paras. 117 to 192)
Dissenting
Reasons:
(paras. 193 to 195)
|
Rothstein J. (McLachlin C.J. and
Cromwell, Moldaver, Wagner, Gascon and Côté JJ. concurring)
Abella J.
Karakatsanis J.
|
Canadian Broadcasting Corp. v. SODRAC 2003
Inc., 2015 SCC 57, [2015] 3 S.C.R. 615
Canadian Broadcasting
Corporation Appellant
v.
SODRAC 2003 Inc. and
Society for Reproduction Rights of
Authors,
Composers and
Publishers in Canada (SODRAC) Inc. Respondents
and
Centre for Intellectual Property Policy,
Ariel Katz,
Samuelson‑Glushko Canadian
Internet Policy and Public Interest Clinic,
Canadian Musical Reproduction Rights
Agency Ltd.,
Canadian Music Publishers Association,
International Confederation of Music
Publishers,
Music Canada, International Federation of the Phonographic Industry,
Canadian Council of Music Industry Associations,
Canadian Independent Music Association and
Association québécoise de l’industrie du disque,
du spectacle et de la vidéo Interveners
Indexed as: Canadian Broadcasting Corp. v. SODRAC 2003 Inc.
2015 SCC 57
File No.: 35918.
2015: March 16; 2015: November 26.
Present: McLachlin C.J. and Abella, Rothstein, Cromwell,
Moldaver, Karakatsanis, Wagner, Gascon and Côté JJ.
on appeal from the federal court of appeal
Intellectual property — Copyright — Licences —
Collective societies — SODRAC administering reproduction rights as collective
society — Application by SODRAC to set terms and conditions of licence for
reproduction by CBC of musical works in SODRAC’s repertoire from 2008 to 2012 —
CBC making ephemeral synchronization copies, including musical works, as
producer and ephemeral broadcast‑incidental copies, including musical
works, as broadcaster — Synchronization copies made during production subject
to licence — Whether broadcast‑incidental copies engage reproduction
right — If so, whether licence for broadcast‑incidental copies should be
implied in synchronization licences — If reproduction licence required for
broadcast‑incidental copies, whether Board erred in valuation of licence
— Whether Board applied principles of technological neutrality and balance
properly — Copyright Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C‑42, s. 3(1) (d).
Intellectual property — Copyright — Interim
licences — Collective societies — Board decision setting terms and conditions
of licence released after expiry of licence period — Board setting interim
licence based on status quo — 2008‑2012 licence selected as status quo — Whether
Board erred in setting terms of interim licence — Copyright Act, R.S.C. 1985,
c. C‑42, s. 66.51 .
Administrative law — Judicial review — Standard
of review — Copyright Board — Appropriate standard of review — Whether specific
standard of review should be ascribed to each issue arising in decision under
review.
CBC
is both a producer and a broadcaster of television programs: it broadcasts its
own original programs as well as those that it has licensed or bought from
third parties, and it shows these programs on television and the Internet.
SODRAC is a collective society organized to manage the reproduction rights of
its members. When broadcasters, including CBC, produce a program, they make
several kinds of copies. “Synchronization copies” incorporate musical works
into an audiovisual program. A “master copy” is the final copy created when
synchronization is complete. CBC loads the master copy into its digital content
management system and makes several copies of the completed program, and thus of
the music incorporated into the program, for internal use. Where these copies
are made to facilitate broadcasting, they are called “broadcast‑incidental
copies”.
Following
Bishop v. Stevens, [1990] 2 S.C.R. 467, in which it was held that
“ephemeral” copies engaged the reproduction right in s. 3(1) (d) of
the Copyright Act and that the right to make those copies is not implied
by law in a broadcast licence, SODRAC began to differentiate between
synchronization copies and copies made for other purposes. Initially, it
granted free synchronization licences to licence holders, but it began asking
producers to pay for those licences in or about 2006. In 2008, when SODRAC and
CBC were unable to come to an agreement for the renewal of CBC’s licence,
SODRAC asked the Board to set the terms of a licence for November 14,
2008, to March 31, 2012. CBC argues that broadcast‑incidental copies
do not engage the reproduction right, or, in the alternative, that if a licence
covering broadcast‑incidental copies is required, it should be implied
from its synchronization licences or the synchronization licences of third
party producers.
In
2012, the Copyright Board held that CBC’s broadcast‑incidental copying
activity engaged the reproduction right, that a licence for such copies could
not be implied from synchronization licences covering the production process,
and that CBC required a separate reproduction licence to legitimize its
broadcast‑incidental copying. The Board valued this licence based on a
ratio used in the commercial radio context and found to be equally applicable
to the television context. The Board later issued an interim licence to take
effect after the expiry of the 2008‑2012 licence that extended the terms
of that licence on an interim basis, subject to minor modifications. The
Federal Court of Appeal upheld both the 2008‑2012 licence and the interim
licence that followed, subject to minor amendments.
Held
(Abella and Karakatsanis JJ. dissenting): The appeal should be allowed;
the 2008‑2012 licence and the interim licence should both be set aside
and the decisions of the Copyright Board should be remitted to the Board for
reconsideration.
Per
McLachlin C.J. and Rothstein, Cromwell, Moldaver, Wagner, Gascon and
Côté JJ.: Because of the unusual statutory scheme under which the Board
and the court may each have to consider the same legal question at first
instance, the standard of correctness applies to whether broadcast‑incidental
copies engage the reproduction right, and thus whether the Copyright Act
allows SODRAC to seek a licence for CBC’s broadcast‑incidental copying. A
standard of reasonableness applies to each of the remaining issues.
The
Board was correct in finding that broadcast‑incidental copying engages
the reproduction right, consistent with this Court’s decision in Bishop
and the context of the statutory scheme set out in the Copyright Act .
Though this Court’s subsequent decisions in Théberge v. Galerie d’Art du
Petit Champlain inc., 2002 SCC 34, [2002] 2 S.C.R. 336, and Entertainment
Software Association v. Society of Composers, Authors and Music Publishers of
Canada, 2012 SCC 34, [2012] S.C.R. 231, have refined the understanding of
the purposes of copyright law, the central holding in Bishop, that
ephemeral copies engage the reproduction right, remains sound. Ephemeral copies
are not exempted by ss. 30.8 and 30.9 , and nothing in the text, context or
legislative history of ss. 3(1) , 30.8 or 30.9 supports the view that
broadcast‑incidental copies are not reproductions under the Act. While
balance between user and right‑holder interests and technological
neutrality are central to Canadian copyright law, they cannot change the
express terms of the Act.
The
Board was also correct in finding that a licence to make broadcast‑incidental
copies should not be implied from synchronization licences issued by SODRAC.
The synchronization licences do not give any indication that they included the
right to make broadcast‑incidental copies. The separation of
synchronization and broadcast‑incidental licences does not offend
technological neutrality. Recognizing production and broadcasting as distinct
activities validly subject to disaggregated licences does not impose new layers
of protections and fees based solely on technological change. Economic
considerations also justified the practice of dividing synchronization and
broadcast‑incidental copy licences.
However,
the Board erred in failing to consider the principles of technological
neutrality and balance in setting the valuation of this licence. The principle
of technological neutrality recognizes that, absent parliamentary intent to the
contrary, the Act should not be interpreted or applied to favour or
discriminate against any particular form of technology. In the regulatory
context, the principle of technological neutrality applies to valuation of a
reproduction licence, so the Board should compare the value derived from the
use of reproduction in the old and new technologies in its valuation analysis.
To
maintain a balance between user and right‑holder interests, the Board
must also assess the respective contributions of the user and the copyright‑protected
works to the value enjoyed by the user. It must have regard for factors it
considers relevant in striking a balance between user and right‑holder
rights when fixing licence fees. Relevant factors will include the risks taken
by the user, the extent of the investment made by the user in the new
technology, and the nature of the copyright-protected work’s use in the new
technology.
The
2008-2012 licence is set aside as it relates to the valuation of CBC’s
television and Internet broadcast-incidental copies and the decision of the
Board in that regard is remitted to the Board for reconsideration of that
valuation in accordance with the principles of technological neutrality and
balance. The Board’s valuation methodology did not give any indication that the
principles of technological neutrality and balance were considered in the way
it fixed the SODRAC reproduction royalties payable by CBC. The Board did not
compare the value contributed by the copyright-protected reproductions in the
old and new technology. It also failed to take into account the relative
contributions made by the use of copyright-protected works and the risk and
investment by the user in its new technology, as required by the balance
principle.
It
was reasonable to use the interim licence to maintain the status quo and to use
the 2008‑2012 statutory licence as the status quo in this case. However,
because the interim licence was based on the terms of the 2008‑2012
licence, it is set aside and the Board’s decision in that regard is also remitted
for reconsideration consistent with the principles guiding the redetermination
of the 2008‑2012 licence.
Finally,
the Board has the statutory authority to fix the terms of licences pursuant to
s. 70.2, but the user retains the ability to accept or decline those
terms.
Per
Abella J. (dissenting): The Board’s decision to impose royalty fees for
broadcast‑incidental copies was unreasonable.
The
Copyright Act strikes a careful balance between promoting the
public interest in the encouragement and dissemination of creative works, and
obtaining a just reward for creators. Maintaining the balance that best
supports the public interest in creative works is the central purpose of the Copyright
Act . The question is how to preserve this balance in the face of new
technologies that are transforming the mechanisms through which creative works
are produced, reproduced and distributed. The answer lies in applying a robust
vision of technological neutrality as a core principle of statutory
interpretation under the Copyright Act .
A
reasonable interpretation of the scope of the reproduction right must consider
the wording of ss. 3(1) and 3(1) (d) in the context of the overarching
purpose of the Copyright Act and the central principle of technological
neutrality. Adopting a literal interpretation of the right in s. 3(1) (d)
would leave no room for the principle of technological neutrality, which is
rooted in the words “to produce or reproduce the work or any substantial part
thereof in any material form whatever”. Technological neutrality ensures that
copyright attaches to a particular activity based on the essential character of
the activity or output, rather than to the process by which it occurs.
Technological neutrality consists of media neutrality and functional
equivalence. Media neutrality seeks to ensure that copyright doctrine evolves
to embrace new technologies, preserving copyright not only in the medium in
which the work is created but all existing and future media in which the work
might be expressed. As long as the creative expression survives the transfer to
a new medium, copyright in the work will survive.
Functional
equivalence, on the other hand, focuses on what the technology at issue is
doing, rather than on the technical modalities of how it is doing it.
This leads to interpretations of the Act that give functionally
equivalent technologies similar treatment. It also avoids imposing copyright
liability on technologies and activities that only incidentally implicate
copyright. This case involves an application of functional equivalence.
Broadcast‑incidental
copies are those created to achieve a broadcast by providing the necessary
technical modalities. In the context of copyright law, their creation cannot be
seen as distinct from the core activity of broadcasting. A broadcast‑incidental
copy is not transformed into a separate reproduction of the work simply because
the technical imperatives of effecting a broadcast require the presence of
multiple copies. Broadcast‑incidental copies do not, as a result,
attract separate royalties. To conclude otherwise is to doom both technological
neutrality and the ability of copyright law to preserve the delicate balance
between the rights of copyright holders and the public’s interest in the
dissemination of creative works.
SODRAC
holds only the reproduction rights in the works in its repertoire. It is not
entitled to royalties associated with the broadcasting of those works, which
are paid to the Society of Composers, Authors and Music Publishers of Canada
(SOCAN). SODRAC is attempting to claim royalties in this case for the method
of broadcasting the musical works to the public, despite never before receiving
royalties for broadcasting activities.
Sections 30.8
and 30.9 of the Copyright Act were a legislative response to this
Court’s holding in Bishop, which was based on a literal interpretation
of s. 3(1) (d). It held that the licensing of a performance right
did not implicitly authorize ephemeral recordings of the performance for the
purposes of effecting the broadcast. These discrete legislative responses to a
specific judicial interpretation of the Copyright Act are far from
representing the kind of express statutory language needed to displace such
fundamental objectives and principles underpinning the Copyright Act as
technological neutrality and balance. They were meant to provide greater
certainty that certain classes of ephemeral recording are not to attract
copyright liability and to maintain technological neutrality, not to be a
defining statement on the content of the reproduction right, or which kinds of
copies will trigger it.
The
Federal Court of Appeal’s suggestion that “more copies mean more value and
thus, more royalties” violates technological neutrality by imposing additional
copyright liability on the use of more efficient copy‑dependent
broadcasting technologies, by erroneously tying the compensation owed to
creators of copyrighted works to how efficiently the user exercises the right
that was bargained for, and by artificially raising the cost of broadcasting.
It also fails to take account of the fact that broadcasters are required to
make certain broadcast‑incidental copies in order to comply with CRTC regulations
and that the CBC already pays royalty fees for broadcasting rights to SOCAN.
The
principle of technological neutrality requires that the interpretation and
application of the Copyright Act focus on the essential character of the
activity and not on the technical modalities by which it is achieved. Modern
digital technologies that are dependent on the creation of incidental copies do
not change the essence of the broadcasting activity, and imposing additional
fees for such copies raises the cost of broadcasting, an expense the consumer
will be made to bear. Attaching copyright liability to incidental copies
created as a result of improvements in broadcasting technologies therefore
penalizes broadcasters and the public for utilizing new and improved
technologies and artificially creates entitlements to compensation for creators
that were never intended to be given under the Act.
The
majority’s articulation and application of the principle of technological
neutrality on the issue of valuation is wholly inconsistent with the
established case law in that it ties copyright-holder compensation to actions
of the user that are unrelated and irrelevant to the rights held in the
protected works, and focuses the inquiry on the value that the technology is
creating for the user. The majority proposes two novel factors for the Board to
consider when striking a balance between user and copyright-holder interests:
(1) the nature of the copyright-protected work’s use in the new
technology; and (2) the risks taken and the extent of the investment made
by the user in the new technology. While the first factor is consistent with
the balance articulated in Théberge, the second is not. If this new
second factor is followed to its logical conclusion, users who make a sufficiently
large investment or take sufficiently high risks may, by doing so, deprive the
copyright holder of any entitlement to compensation for the use of the
protected works.
As
this Court confirmed in Entertainment Software Association,
technological neutrality operates to prevent imposing additional, gratuitous
fees on the user simply for the use of more efficient technologies. Focusing
the inquiry on the value that the technology is creating for the user, as
opposed to the functional result created by the technology, misconstrues
technological neutrality. A technological innovation may well create value for
the user by increasing efficiencies, driving down costs, or allowing the user
to remain competitive. But SODRAC, the copyright holder, is not entitled to be
compensated for how efficiently the CBC uses technology to achieve its
broadcast.
The
question of whether the Copyright Board ought to have imposed royalty fees on
the CBC for the creation of incidental copies that arise as a technical part of
the digital broadcasting process, is at the heart of the Copyright Board’s
specialized mandate and therefore reviewable on a reasonableness standard.
Extricating the various components of the Board’s decision and subjecting each
to its own standard of review analysis represents a significant and
inexplicable change in this Court’s standard of review jurisprudence. It risks
creating an unworkable framework for the judicial review of administrative
decision‑making and may well be seen as a way to give reviewing courts
wider discretion to intervene in administrative decisions, as had been done in
the pre‑Dunsmuir era through the use of the “preliminary question
doctrine”.
Per Karakatsanis J.
(dissenting): There is agreement with Abella J.’s decision on the merits
and in the result, but not with her position on the standard of review.
Instead, there is agreement with the majority’s conclusion that the correctness
standard applies to whether broadcast‑incidental copies engage the
reproduction right and that the reasonableness standard applies to the balance of the
decisions of the Copyright Board. However, the general approach taken by the
majority to their analysis of the standard of review is not endorsed. In this
respect, although this Court’s jurisprudence permits the isolation of a
particular question of law on an exceptional basis, it does not require a separate standard of review analysis for each issue. An issue‑by‑issue
approach, within each decision, unnecessarily complicates an already
overwrought area of the law.
Cases Cited
By Rothstein J.
Applied:
Théberge v. Galerie d’Art du Petit Champlain inc., 2002 SCC 34,
[2002] 2 S.C.R. 336; Entertainment Software Association v. Society of
Composers, Authors and Music Publishers of Canada, 2012 SCC 34, [2012] 2
S.C.R. 231; Mouvement laïque québécois v. Saguenay (City), 2015 SCC 16,
[2015] 2 S.C.R. 3; referred to: Bishop v. Stevens, [1990] 2
S.C.R. 467; Rogers Communications Inc. v. Society of Composers, Authors and
Music Publishers of Canada, 2012 SCC 35, [2012] 2 S.C.R. 283; Sattva
Capital Corp. v. Creston Moly Corp., 2014 SCC 53, [2014] 2 S.C.R. 633;
Tervita Corp. v. Canada (Commissioner of Competition), 2015 SCC 3,
[2015] 1 S.C.R. 161; Smith v. Alliance Pipeline Ltd., 2011 SCC 7, [2011]
1 S.C.R. 160; Alberta (Information and Privacy Commissioner) v. Alberta
Teachers’ Association, 2011 SCC 61, [2011] 3 S.C.R. 654; Dunsmuir v. New
Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 190; Performing Right Society,
Ltd. v. Hammond’s Bradford Brewery Co., [1934] 1 Ch. 121; Rizzo
& Rizzo Shoes Ltd. (Re), [1998] 1 S.C.R. 27; Statement of Royalties
to be Collected by CMRRA/SODRAC Inc. for the Reproduction of Musical Works, in
Canada, by Commercial Radio Stations in 2001, 2002, 2003 and 2004, decision
of the Board, file No. 2001‑2004, March 28, 2003 (online:
http://www.cb‑cda.gc.ca/decisions/2003/20030328‑rm‑b.pdf); Statement
of Royalties to be Collected by SOCAN, Re:Sound, CSI, AVLA/SOPROQ and Artisti
in Respect of Commercial Radio Stations, decision of the Board,
July 9, 2010 (online: http://www.cb‑cda.gc.ca/decisions/2010/20100709.pdf);
Gosling v. Veley (1850), 12 Q.B. 328, 116 E.R. 891; Ontario English
Catholic Teachers’ Assn. v. Ontario (Attorney General), 2001 SCC 15, [2001]
1 S.C.R. 470; Attorney‑General v. Wilts United Dairies, Ltd.
(1921), 37 T.L.R. 884; Vigneux v. Canadian Performing Right Society, Ltd.,
[1943] S.C.R. 348; Hanfstaengl v. Empire Palace, [1894] 3 Ch. 109.
By Abella J. (dissenting)
Entertainment
Software Association v. Society of Composers, Authors and Music Publishers of
Canada, 2012 SCC 34, [2012] 2 S.C.R. 231; Bishop v. Stevens, [1990]
2 S.C.R. 467; Théberge v. Galerie d’Art du Petit Champlain inc., 2002
SCC 34, [2002] 2 S.C.R. 336; Society of Composers, Authors and Music
Publishers of Canada v. Canadian Assn. of Internet Providers, 2004 SCC 45,
[2004] 2 S.C.R. 427; Robertson v. Thomson Corp., 2006 SCC 43, [2006] 2
S.C.R. 363; Euro‑Excellence Inc. v. Kraft Canada Inc., 2007 SCC
37, [2007] 3 S.C.R. 20; Society of Composers, Authors and Music Publishers
of Canada v. Bell Canada, 2012 SCC 36, [2012] 2 S.C.R. 326; Alberta
(Education) v. Canadian Copyright Licensing Agency (Access Copyright), 2012
SCC 37, [2012] 2 S.C.R. 345; Rogers Communications Inc. v. Society of
Composers, Authors and Music Publishers of Canada, 2012 SCC 35, [2012] 2
S.C.R. 283; Cinar Corporation v. Robinson, 2013 SCC 73, [2013] 3 S.C.R.
1168; Rizzo & Rizzo Shoes Ltd. (Re), [1998] 1 S.C.R. 27; Council
of Canadians with Disabilities v. VIA Rail Canada Inc., 2007 SCC 15, [2007]
1 S.C.R. 650; Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9, [2008] 1 S.C.R.
190; Canadian Union of Public Employees, Local 963 v. New Brunswick Liquor
Corp., [1979] 2 S.C.R. 227.
By
Karakatsanis J. (dissenting)
Rogers
Communications Inc. v. Society of Composers, Authors and Music Publishers of
Canada, 2012 SCC 35, [2012] 2 S.C.R. 283.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Copyright Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C‑42,
ss. 2.4 , 3(1) , 30.7 [ad. 1997, c. 24, s. 18(1)], 30.8 [idem], 30.9 [idem], 66.51,
66.6(1), 70.2, 70.4.
Copyright Modernization Act, S.C. 2012,
c. 20 , summary.
Television Broadcasting Regulations, 1987, SOR/87‑49, s. 10(5).
Authors Cited
Convention concernant la télévision et la radio entre la Société du
droit de reproduction des auteurs, compositeurs et éditeurs au Canada (SODRAC)
et la Société Radio‑Canada, 19 mars
1992, art. 2.
Craig, Carys J. “Technological Neutrality: (Pre)Serving the
Purposes of Copyright Law”, in Michael Geist, ed., The Copyright Pentalogy:
How the Supreme Court of Canada Shook the Foundations of Canadian Copyright Law.
Ottawa: University of Ottawa Press, 2013, 271.
Driedger, Elmer A. Construction of Statutes, 2nd ed.
Toronto: Butterworths, 1983.
Gurry, Francis. “The Future of Copyright”,
speech delivered at the Blue Sky Conference, Queensland University of
Technology, Sydney, February 25, 2011 (online: http://www.wipo.int/about‑wipo/en/dgo/speeches/dg_blueskyconf_11.html).
Hagen, Gregory R. “Technological Neutrality in Canadian
Copyright Law”, in Michael Geist, ed., The Copyright Pentalogy: How the
Supreme Court of Canada Shook the Foundations of Canadian Copyright Law.
Ottawa: University of Ottawa Press, 2013, 307.
Hutchison, Cameron J. “Case Comment: The 2012 Supreme Court
Copyright Decisions & Technological Neutrality” (2013), 46 U.B.C. L. Rev.
589.
Hutchison, Cameron J. “Technological Neutrality Explained &
Applied to CBC v. SODRAC” (2015), 13 C.J.L.T. 101.
Katz, Ariel. “Commentary: Is Collective Administration of Copyrights
Justified by the Economic Literature?”, in Marcel Boyer, Michael Trebilcock and
David Vaver, eds., Competition Policy and Intellectual Property.
Toronto: Irwin Law, 2009, 449.
Licence authorizing the Canadian
Broadcasting Corporation to reproduce works in the repertoire of SODRAC for the
period from November 14, 2008 to March 31, 2012, file No. 70.2‑2008‑01, November 2, 2012,
revised March 31, 2014, ss. 2.01, 5.03(2) (online: http://www.cb‑cda.gc.ca/decisions/2012/licence‑src‑
modifiee.pdf).
McKeown, John S. Fox on Canadian Law of Copyright and Industrial
Designs, 4th ed. Toronto: Carswell, 2012 (loose‑leaf updated 2015,
release 4).
Pallante, Maria A. “The Next Great Copyright Act” (2013), 36 Colum.
J.L. & Arts 315.
Richard, Hugues G., and Laurent Carrière et al., eds. Canadian Copyright Act Annotated,
vol. 3. Toronto: Carswell, 1993 (loose‑leaf updated 2015, release
8).
Syrtash, Veronica. “Supra‑National Limitations on Copyright
Exceptions: Canada’s Ephemeral Exception and the ‘Three‑Step Test’” (2005‑2006),
19 I.P.J. 521.
Tussey, Deborah. “Technology Matters: The Courts, Media Neutrality,
and New Technologies” (2005), 12 J. Intell. Prop. L. 427.
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 (Noël, Pelletier and Trudel
JJ.A.), 2014 FCA 84, [2015] 1 F.C.R. 509, 457 N.R. 156, 118 C.P.R. (4th) 79,
[2014] F.C.J. No. 321 (QL), 2014 CarswellNat 808 (WL Can.), setting aside
in part a decision of the Copyright Board of Canada, file Nos. 70.2‑2008‑01,
70.2‑2008‑02, November 2, 2012 (online: http://www.cb‑cda.gc.ca/decisions/2012/DecisionSODRAC5andArbitration02‑11‑2012.pdf),
[2012] C.B.D. No. 11 (QL), and affirming a decision of the Copyright Board
of Canada, file No. 70.2-2012-01, January 16, 2013 (online: http://www.cb-cda.gc.ca/decisions/2013/sodrac-16012013.pdf).
Appeal allowed, Abella and Karakatsanis JJ. dissenting.
Marek Nitoslawski and Joanie Lapalme, for the appellant.
Colette Matteau and Lisane Bertrand, for the respondents.
Howard P. Knopf, David Lametti and Ariel Katz, for the
interveners the Centre for Intellectual Property Policy and Ariel Katz.
David Fewer and Jeremy de Beer, for the intervener the
Samuelson‑Glushko Canadian Internet Policy and Public Interest Clinic.
Casey M.
Chisick, Peter J. Henein and Eric Mayzel, for the interveners the
Canadian Musical Reproduction Rights Agency Ltd., the Canadian Music Publishers
Association and the International Confederation of Music Publishers.
Barry B.
Sookman and Daniel G. C. Glover, for the interveners Music
Canada, the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry, the Canadian
Council of Music Industry Associations, the Canadian Independent Music
Association and Association québécoise de l’industrie du disque, du spectacle
et de la vidéo.
The judgment of McLachlin
C.J. and Cromwell, Moldaver, Wagner, Gascon and Côté JJ. was delivered by
[1]
Rothstein J. — Broadcasting a program that uses
copyright-protected music engages the right to communicate the work to the
public by telecommunication — a right that rests exclusively with the copyright
holder for that musical work. Thus, broadcasters must secure a licence to
communicate the work. Broadcasting activities are complex, however, and
broadcasters often engage not only in the telecommunication of musical works as
part of the airing of a program, but also in making copies of programs, and
thus of the music incorporated therein, for internal use. Where these copies
are made to facilitate broadcasting, they may be described as
broadcast-incidental copies.
[2]
Making copies of a copyright-protected work
implicates the reproduction right, which also rests exclusively with the
copyright holder. This case concerns the relationship between
broadcast-incidental copies and the reproduction right established by s. 3(1) (d)
of the Copyright Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-42 .
[3]
In 2012, the Copyright Board, in setting the
terms of a licence between Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (“CBC”) and SODRAC
2003 Inc. and the Society for Reproduction Rights of Authors, Composers and
Publishers in Canada (SODRAC) Inc. (collectively, “SODRAC”) for the 2008-2012
period, held that CBC’s broadcast-incidental copying activity engaged the
reproduction right, that a licence for such copies could not be implied from
synchronization licences covering the production process, and that CBC required
a separate reproduction licence to legitimize its broadcast-incidental copying.
The Board further found that the appropriate valuation for this licence was
more than nominal, and issued a licence authorizing CBC to reproduce works in
the SODRAC repertoire in conjunction with a list of activities, including the
production of CBC’s in-house programs and the broadcasting of programs on CBC’s
television services and on the Internet: Licence authorizing the Canadian
Broadcasting Corporation to reproduce works in the repertoire of SODRAC for the
period from November 14, 2008 to March 31, 2012 (online) (“2008-2012
statutory licence” or “2008-2012 licence”), s. 2.01.
[4]
It later issued an interim licence to take
effect after the expiry of the 2008-2012 licence that extended the terms of
that licence on an interim basis, subject to minor modifications. The Federal
Court of Appeal upheld both the 2008-2012 licence and the interim licence that
followed, subject to minor amendments.
[5]
The Board was correct in finding that
broadcast-incidental copying engages the reproduction right, consistent with
this Court’s decision in Bishop v. Stevens, [1990] 2 S.C.R. 467, and the
context of the statutory scheme set out in the Copyright Act . Though
this Court’s subsequent decisions in Théberge v. Galerie d’Art du Petit
Champlain inc., 2002 SCC 34, [2002] 2 S.C.R. 336, and Entertainment
Software Association v. Society of Composers, Authors and Music Publishers of
Canada, 2012 SCC 34, [2012] 2 S.C.R. 231 (“ESA”), have refined our
understanding of the purposes of copyright law, the central holding in Bishop,
that ephemeral copies engage the reproduction right, remains sound. I further
agree with the Board and the Federal Court of Appeal that a licence to make
broadcast-incidental copies should not be implied from synchronization licences
issued by SODRAC.
[6]
However, in my respectful opinion, the Board
erred in failing to consider the principles of technological neutrality and
balance in setting the valuation of this licence. I would remit this matter to
the Board for reconsideration of the valuation of the 2008-2012 licence for
CBC’s television and Internet broadcast-incidental copies applying the
principles of technological neutrality and balance. Because the interim licence
that followed was based on the terms of the 2008-2012 licence, I would also set
it aside and remit it for redetermination.
I.
Facts
[7]
The appellant CBC is both a producer and a
broadcaster of television programs: it broadcasts its own original programs as
well as those that it has licensed or bought from third parties, and it shows
these programs on television and the Internet. Where a program contains
copyright-protected musical works, CBC must ensure that it has secured all
necessary licences for that work in order to reproduce and broadcast the work
as part of a television program. Production and broadcasting may implicate both
reproduction and the telecommunication rights in a work. This appeal is
concerned primarily with the reproduction right established by s. 3(1) (d)
of the Copyright Act .
[8]
The respondent the Society for Reproduction
Rights of Authors, Composers and Publishers in Canada (SODRAC) Inc. is a
collective society organized to manage the reproduction rights of its members.
Its focus is on French-language music reproduction rights. Its members assign
their reproduction rights to the collective society, which then stands in place
of individual right holders in negotiations with parties who seek permission to
reproduce works in its repertoire. This repertoire comprises the majority of
French-language works written by Canadians.
A.
Synchronization Copies and Broadcast-Incidental
Copies
[9]
A producer who wishes to use a musical work in
an audiovisual program must incorporate that work into the production copy of
the program, a process known in the industry as “synchronization”. The parties
do not dispute that the synchronization process is an exercise of the
reproduction right, and thus requires a licence if the musical work being
incorporated is under copyright. Once the synchronization process is complete,
the final product is referred to as a “master” copy. Where the producer is not
also a broadcaster, this copy is then passed on once the program has been sold
or licensed to a broadcaster.
[10]
Once CBC is in possession of the master copy of
a program, whether it has been produced in-house or by an independent producer,
the master copy is loaded into CBC’s digital content management system, a
practice that has become widespread among broadcasters in recent years. Digital
systems generally involve the storage of copies as electronic files on hard drives,
while older analog systems stored copies on physical tapes. CBC makes use of
its digital content management system to perform a number of functions that
help prepare a program for broadcast.
[11]
These processes result in the creation of
several copies, which are at the heart of this appeal. The parties refer to
these copies as “broadcast-incidental copies”. Broadcast-incidental copies may
be made for several purposes. For example, a copy may be made to reformat the
master copy to suit CBC’s technical requirements, or to edit the copy for
timing, language or closed captioning purposes. One or more additional copies
may also be made to allow for screening of the program by various teams within
CBC before broadcast.
B.
Licensing Practices
[12]
Broadly speaking, reproduction licences may take
two forms: transactional or blanket. In a transactional licence, a prospective
user seeks out the holder of the reproduction right in a particular work that
the producer wishes to include in a program and negotiates an individual
licence agreement. Blanket licences are negotiated between a producer and a
collective society, and grant the producer the right to reproduce all works
within the collective’s repertoire, subject to the negotiated terms of the
licence.
[13]
Parties negotiating a reproduction licence may
also choose to structure it as a “through-to-the-viewer” licence, in which the
right holder grants the authority to make all reproductions necessary to take a
program from production through to its ultimate broadcast to viewers.
Alternately, they may choose to structure it as a “bare” synchronization
licence, which grants the authority to make synchronization copies but does not
cover additional copies made to facilitate broadcasting: decision of the
Copyright Board, file Nos. 70.2-2008-01, 70.2-2008-02, November 2, 2012
(online) (“Statutory Licence Decision”), at paras. 15-16. As will be discussed
below, however, CBC disputes whether bare synchronization licences are
possible, or whether they must include an implied licence to make
broadcast-incidental copies.
[14]
Where CBC acts as a producer, its practice has
been to seek transactional synchronization licences from individual right
holders where possible. When synchronizing French-language music, SODRAC
exercises collective authority over the substantial majority of such works, and
CBC has used blanket licences. Where CBC acts as a broadcaster of third party
programs, it does not seek synchronization licences, as those licences will
have been obtained by the producer before the final master copy of the program
is handed over to CBC.
[15]
The issues in dispute on appeal arise in part
from the history of dealings between CBC and SODRAC with regard to reproduction
licences. It is helpful to review this history in understanding the arguments
presented by both parties.
[16]
In 1990, this Court, per McLachlin J. (as she
then was), issued its decision in Bishop, holding that “the right to
broadcast a performance under s. 3(1) of the Act does not include the right to
make ephemeral recordings for the purpose of facilitating the broadcast”: p.
485. Thus, reproductions made to facilitate broadcasting need to be authorized
separate from the authorization to broadcast a performance to the public.
[17]
Following Bishop, in 1992, CBC and SODRAC
first entered into a negotiated licence agreement permitting CBC to make
synchronization copies and other reproductions of works within the SODRAC
repertoire: Convention concernant la télévision et la radio entre la Société
du droit de reproduction des auteurs, compositeurs et éditeurs au Canada
(SODRAC) et la Société Radio-Canada, March 19, 1992 (“1992 Licence”), A.R.,
vol. IV, at p. 1. This agreement did not disaggregate synchronization copies
and broadcast-incidental copies, but rather granted to CBC the authority to
make any copies of works in SODRAC’s repertoire in connection with its
broadcasting activities: 1992 Licence, art. 2. The 1992 Licence was thus a
blanket, through-to-the-viewer licence. This licence also extended upstream
authorization to third party producers to make synchronization copies in works
commissioned for broadcast by CBC: Statutory Licence Decision, at para. 72.
[18]
In 1998, SODRAC began to differentiate between
synchronization copies made by producers and copies for other purposes made by
broadcasters. It did so by announcing its intent to require producers to obtain
synchronization licences, though it granted such licences for free where
programs were commissioned by broadcasters who held licences to SODRAC’s
repertoire, on the understanding that the broadcaster had paid for the licence
necessary to cover the producer’s copying: Statutory Licence Decision, at para.
72.
[19]
In or about 2006, SODRAC began asking producers
to pay for their synchronization licences. These licences were structured to
permit producers to make synchronization copies, but virtually all of them
expressly barred producers from authorizing further downstream copying by
broadcasters: Statutory Licence Decision, at para. 73.
[20]
In November 2008, after SODRAC and CBC were
unable to come to an agreement for the renewal of CBC’s existing licence,
SODRAC asked the Board, pursuant to s. 70.2 of the Copyright Act , to set
the terms of a licence between the parties covering the reproduction by CBC of
works in SODRAC’s repertoire for the period from November 14, 2008 to March 31,
2012: Statutory Licence Decision, at para. 3.
II.
Proceedings Below
A.
Statutory Licence Decision
[21]
The Board issued its decision regarding the
terms of the 2008-2012 statutory licence between CBC and SODRAC on November 2,
2012. This decision also set the terms of a licence between Les Chaînes Télé
Astral and Teletoon (“Astral”) and SODRAC, and of a tariff covering certain
reproduction activities related to the distribution of cinematographic works.
Neither the Astral licence nor the tariff is at issue before this Court.
[22]
The Board conducted its analysis from the
understanding that broadcast-incidental copies are reproductions within the
meaning of the Copyright Act , and that they are not subject to an
exception for ephemeral copies under the Act: see Statutory Licence Decision,
at paras. 12 and 72.
[23]
CBC and Astral argued in part that SODRAC’s
layered licence strategy — under which both producers and broadcasters would
each be expected to pay a licence fee for their respective reproduction activities
— went against prevailing industry practice, and was inconsistent with a
through-to-the-viewer licensing approach: Statutory Licence Decision, at paras.
41-42 and 65. The Board remarked that the focus in this proceeding “must be to
a large extent on SODRAC’s practices”: Statutory Licence Decision, at para. 64.
Broader licensing practices were relevant, but not dispositive.
[24]
The Board found that “outright
[through-to-the-viewer] buyouts are not the dominant model in Canada”, and that
SODRAC “has issued few, if any, through-to-the-viewer [licences]”: Statutory
Licence Decision, at para. 71. Thus, the Board did not find that the weight of
industry practice or of SODRAC’s past practices established
through-to-the-viewer licensing as a binding norm that would invalidate a
layered approach to licensing.
[25]
The Board turned to the question of how royalty
payments under the licence should be valued. Regarding the relationship between
technological innovation and licence valuation, the Board observed that
[t]he adoption of copy-dependent
technologies allows broadcasters to remain competitive and to protect their
core business even when it does not generate direct profits. These technologies
are necessary for Astral and CBC to remain relevant so that services continue
to be seen by the public. These are clear benefits arising from the
copy-dependant technologies. Since these technologies involve the use of
additional copies, some of the benefits associated with the technologies must
be reflected in the remuneration that flows from these incidental, additional
copies. [Endnote omitted; para. 81.]
[26]
The Board set out its analysis of the
appropriate valuation of the royalties covering CBC’s television-related
copying activity. Regarding the broadcast-incidental copies at issue before
this Court, the Board employed a ratio methodology and found that the
appropriate royalty payable to SODRAC for these reproductions was to be
determined as a percentage of the royalties CBC paid to secure communication
rights for music that it broadcast on radio and television: Statutory Licence
Decision, at paras. 108-9. The Board applied its reasoning regarding television
broadcast-incidental copies to copies related to Internet delivery as well:
Statutory Licence Decision, at para. 148.
B.
Interim Licence Decision
[27]
Following the release of its final decision
regarding the 2008-2012 licence, the Board issued an interim decision in
January 2013 extending the terms of the 2008-2012 licence on an interim basis
pending the Board’s final determination of appropriate licence terms for the
period from April 1, 2012 to March 31, 2016: Copyright Board file No.
70.2-2012-01, January 16, 2013 (online) (“Interim Licence Decision”).
[28]
In the Interim Licence Decision, the Board
observed that “the best way to achieve the objectives of an interim decision is
to maintain the status quo while avoiding a legal vacuum”, though circumstances
may sometimes warrant a departure from the status quo: Interim Licence Decision,
at para. 18. The Board then found that the 2008-2012 licence was a more
appropriate representation of the status quo than the 1992 agreement that
preceded it: Interim Licence Decision, at para. 19.
[29]
Accordingly, the terms of the 2008-2012 licence
were used to frame the interim licence. This structure included, among other
things, a blanket synchronization fee, despite CBC’s expressed desire to move
to a transactional model: Interim Licence Decision, at para. 8.
C.
Federal Court of Appeal, 2014 FCA 84, [2015] 1
F.C.R. 509 (“FCA Decision”)
[30]
The principal argument before the Federal Court
of Appeal concerned whether the Board’s Statutory Licence Decision was
inconsistent with the principle of technological neutrality as discussed by
this Court in ESA: FCA Decision, at para. 26.
[31]
In analyzing the Board’s approach to valuing
broadcast-incidental copies, the Federal Court of Appeal cited as a fundamental
proposition the notion that,
if technological advances require the
making of more copies of a musical work in order to get an audiovisual work
that incorporates it to market, those additional copies add value to the
enterprise. As a result, they attract additional royalties, not necessarily on
a per-copy basis but on the basis of the additional value generated by those
copies. Simply put, more copies mean more value and thus, more royalties.
[para. 28]
It discussed the
statements in ESA concerning the nature of technological neutrality, but
did not find sufficient guidance to warrant its application to the facts of
this case: paras. 40 and 44.
[32]
The Federal Court of Appeal affirmed the Board’s
Statutory Licence Decision, subject to one technical amendment to the discount
formula intended to capture CBC’s use of songs already subject to
through-to-the-viewer licences: paras. 78-82. The court also affirmed the
Board’s Interim Licence Decision: paras. 93-94.
III.
Issues
[33]
This appeal raises the following issues:
(1)
What is the appropriate standard of review?
(2)
Do broadcast-incidental copies engage the
reproduction right, and if so, should a licence for such copies be implied in
synchronization licences?
(3)
If a licence for broadcast-incidental copies was
required, did the Board err in setting the value of that licence in view of the
principles of technological neutrality and balance?
(4)
Did the Board err in setting the terms of the
interim licence?
IV.
Statutory Provisions
[34]
The relevant statutory provisions are set out in
the Appendix. The provisions most directly at issue in this appeal are ss.
3(1) (d), 30.7 , 30.8 , 30.9 and 70.2 of the Copyright Act .
V.
Analysis
A.
Standard of Review
[35]
Whether broadcast-incidental copies engage the
reproduction right, and thus whether the Copyright Act allows SODRAC to
seek a licence for CBC’s broadcast-incidental copying, is a question of law.
This Court has established that there is a presumption that the decisions of
administrative bodies should receive deference when interpreting or applying
their home statute. However, because of the “unusual statutory scheme under
which the Board and the court may each have to consider the same legal question
[under the Copyright Act ] at first instance”, the presumption is
rebutted here: Rogers Communications Inc. v. Society of Composers, Authors
and Music Publishers of Canada, 2012 SCC 35, [2012] 2 S.C.R. 283, at para.
15. Thus, a standard of correctness applies to this issue.
[36]
Whether a licence for CBC’s broadcast-incidental
copying is implied in the associated synchronization licences involves both the
scope of the reproduction right and the interpretation of SODRAC’s
synchronization licences. As this Court has recently observed, “[c]ontractual
interpretation involves issues of mixed fact and law as it is an exercise in
which the principles of contractual interpretation are applied to the words of
the written contract, considered in light of the factual matrix”: Sattva
Capital Corp. v. Creston Moly Corp., 2014 SCC 53, [2014] 2 S.C.R. 633, at
para. 50. The licences here fall under that principle. Accordingly, a standard
of reasonableness applies when reviewing the Board’s determination regarding
what may be implied from the relevant synchronization licences.
[37]
The Board’s decision establishing the monetary
value of a broadcast-incidental copying licence involves the examination of how
the user intends to make use of the licensed works in light of the legal
principles relevant to the reproduction right, and thus involves questions of
mixed fact and law. Accordingly, a standard of reasonableness applies: Tervita
Corp. v. Canada (Commissioner of Competition), 2015 SCC 3, [2015] 1 S.C.R.
161, at para. 40; Smith v. Alliance Pipeline Ltd., 2011 SCC 7, [2011] 1
S.C.R. 160, at para. 26.
[38]
CBC challenges the Board’s interim order on two
points. First, CBC argues that the 2008-2012 licence was not an appropriate
status quo baseline for the interim licence. The selection of the
baseline involves the exercise of the Board’s discretion to issue an interim
licence under s. 66.51 of the Copyright Act . This exercise of discretion
is not shared with the courts, and thus will be reviewed on a reasonableness
standard.
[39]
The second basis on which CBC challenges the
interim order concerns whether the Board may impose a blanket synchronization
licence on a user against that user’s wishes. CBC characterizes this as a
question of the Board’s jurisdiction to issue certain types of licences, and
argues that it should be reviewed for correctness. While it is possible to
frame any interpretation of a tribunal’s home statute as a question of whether
the tribunal has the jurisdiction to take a particular action, this Court has
rejected this definition of jurisdiction in the context of standard of review
and emphasized that the category of “true questions of jurisdiction”, if it
exists at all, is narrow: Alberta (Information and Privacy Commissioner) v.
Alberta Teachers’ Association, 2011 SCC 61, [2011] 3 S.C.R. 654, at para.
34. As in Alberta Teachers’ Association, the parties have not presented
argument on the question of whether the category of true questions of
jurisdiction should continue to be recognized. Assuming such questions exist,
this issue is not one of the “exceptional” instances of a true question of
jurisdiction.
[40]
The question of whether the Board is generally
able to impose blanket synchronization licences under the Copyright Act
against the wishes of a licensee is nonetheless a question of law, but it is
not an interpretive question the Board shares with the courts at first
instance: the courts can be seized of the question of whether the Board acted
properly in structuring a licence only once there is a Board-imposed licence to
review. Accordingly, this issue attracts a standard of reasonableness.
[41]
Justice Abella objects to the segmentation of
issues for the purpose of standard of review analysis and to the confusion she
says this causes. This is the same objection she raised in Mouvement laïque
québécois v. Saguenay (City), 2015 SCC 16, [2015] 2 S.C.R. 3, a decision
issued by this Court in April 2015. Saguenay is the controlling
authority and, on the issue of standard of review, these reasons apply Saguenay.
[42]
Justice Karakatsanis disagrees that a specific
standard of review should be ascribed to each issue arising in the appeal.
However, she herself extricates the question of whether broadcast-incidental
copies engage the reproduction right. Then she says that a reasonableness
standard applies to the balance of the decisions under review. She does not
explain how she could come to that conclusion without considering the issues in
the balance of the decisions under review. With respect, every standard of
review analysis requires identification of the issues under review: Dunsmuir
v. New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 190, at paras. 51-64. She has
simply done implicitly what these reasons do explicitly.
B.
SODRAC May Choose to Require a Licence for CBC’s
Broadcast-Incidental Copies in Addition to Related Synchronization Licences
(1)
Broadcast-Incidental Copies Engage the
Reproduction Right
[43]
Section 3(1) (d) of the Copyright Act
provides the copyright holder with the sole right “to make any sound recording,
cinematograph film or other contrivance by means of which [a] work may be
mechanically reproduced or performed”.
[44]
SODRAC’s efforts to seek licence payments for
CBC’s broadcast-incidental copying have their origins in this Court’s decision
in Bishop. This Court held that the making of “ephemeral” copies — in
that case, recordings of a musical performance made to facilitate a later
broadcast — does engage the reproduction right under the language of s. 3(1) (d)
of the Copyright Act , and that the right to make such copies is not
implied by law in a broadcast licence: pp. 484-85.
[45]
CBC’s principal argument on appeal is that
broadcast-incidental copies do not engage the reproduction right, and thus do
not support SODRAC’s efforts to seek licence fees for such copies. In so
arguing, CBC places considerable weight on two general principles of Canadian
copyright law: the balancing of user and right-holder interests as discussed by
this Court in Théberge per Binnie J., and the principle of technological
neutrality discussed most prominently by this Court in ESA. In CBC’s
estimation, the development of these principles has resulted in a significant
evolution of copyright law since Bishop.
[46]
CBC asserts that “[t]he scope of the
reproduction right is determined by a balancing exercise between the legitimate
interests of copyright holders and copyright users, such as the one this Court
conducted in Théberge” (A.F., at para. 81), and that a proper balancing
of user and right-holder interests favours finding that broadcast-incidental
copies do not engage the reproduction right. It also asserts that the principle
of technological neutrality is a means of protecting the proper balance between
users and right holders in a digital environment: A.F., at para. 66.
[47]
To be sure, Théberge demonstrates how
this Court’s understanding of the purpose of the Copyright Act has
evolved since the pronouncement in Bishop that the “single object” of
the Act was to benefit authors: Bishop, at pp. 478-79, quoting Performing
Right Society, Ltd. v. Hammond’s
Bradford Brewery Co., [1934] 1 Ch. 121, at p. 127.
Théberge observed that, when weighing competing policy interests under
copyright, “[t]he proper balance . . . lies not only in recognizing the
creator’s rights but in giving due weight to their limited nature”: para. 31.
Similarly, in ESA, this Court observed that the principle of
technological neutrality guards against “impos[ing] a gratuitous cost for the
use of more efficient, Internet-based technologies”: para. 9, per Abella and
Moldaver JJ. But in neither case did the Court go so far as to allow these
principles to override express statutory terms. The scope of a right under the Copyright
Act is determined, first and foremost, by the Act itself. The principles at
work in Théberge and ESA can inform the interpretation and
application of the terms of the Act, but they cannot supplant them.
[48]
The modern approach to statutory interpretation
requires that we examine the “words of an Act . . . in their entire context and
in their grammatical and ordinary sense harmoniously with the scheme of the
Act, the object of the Act, and the intention of Parliament”: E. A. Driedger, Construction
of Statutes (2nd ed. 1983), at p. 87, approved and adopted in Rizzo
& Rizzo Shoes Ltd. (Re), [1998] 1 S.C.R. 27, at para. 21.
[49]
The ordinary meaning of the text of the Copyright
Act indicates that broadcast-incidental copying activities do engage the
reproduction right. As this Court held in Bishop, the text of s. 3(1) (d)
covers such activity by its terms. Making broadcast-incidental copies is the
making of a “sound recording, cinematograph film or other contrivance by means
of which the work may be mechanically reproduced or performed”: s. 3(1) (d).
Though this Court’s understanding of the purpose of copyright has evolved since
the observation in Bishop that its “sole purpose” is protecting author
interests, no recourse to this observation is required to read s. 3(1) (d)
as being engaged by broadcast-incidental copying activities: p. 470. The plain
language of the statute itself establishes this much.
[50]
The broader statutory context of the Act further
provides strong indications that the legislature intended for
broadcast-incidental copies to engage the reproduction right. Most
significantly, ss. 30.8 and 30.9 (set out in full in the Appendix), enacted as
part of a series of amendments to the Act in 1997, establish specific
circumstances in which “[i]t is not an infringement of copyright” to
make copies to facilitate broadcasting: S.C. 1997, c. 24, s. 18(1). In order to
gain the benefit of ss. 30.8 or 30.9 , broadcasters must meet a list of
stringent conditions concerning, among other things, the timing, record
keeping, and destruction of the copies. As counsel for CBC acknowledged during
the hearing before this Court, CBC’s broadcast-incidental copying activities do
not fit within the language of ss. 30.8 or 30.9 : transcript, at p. 26.
[51]
If it were true, as CBC urges, that the Copyright
Act should properly be read such that broadcast-incidental copying does not
engage the reproduction right, there would have been no need for the
legislature to enact ss. 30.8 and 30.9 . Their existence is strong evidence that
Parliament intended, as a baseline, that broadcast-incidental copies engage the
reproduction right. As noted above, though the principles of balancing user and
right-holder interests and of technological neutrality are central to Canadian
copyright law, they cannot change the express terms of the Copyright Act .
[52]
Abella J. is of the opinion that, in reaching this conclusion, these reasons
employ a “literal approach to the interpretation of s. 3(1) (d), reading
the words of the provision without the benefit of the purpose and context of
the Act to ascertain its true meaning”: para. 170. It is rather my
colleague who uses the principle of technological neutrality to displace the
words Parliament has used. With respect, through her use of the principle of
technological neutrality, she does not give sufficient attention to the text
and context and the legislative history that explain the carve out from the
reproduction right provided by ss. 30.8 and 30.9 and the residual broad scope
of s. 3(1) (d).
[53]
Subsequent to Bishop, in 1997, Parliament
enacted ss. 30.8 and 30.9 . Abella J. writes that these exceptions are not to be
understood as a “comprehensive statement on the content of the reproduction
right, or which kinds of copies will trigger it”: para. 175. But before ss.
30.8 and 30.9 received royal assent, broadcasters asked Parliament to expand
their scope. In their view, ss. 30.8 and 30.9 unduly favoured the rights of
copyright holders. The pleas of the broadcasters, however, went unanswered:
see V. Syrtash, “Supra-National Limitations on Copyright Exceptions: Canada’s
Ephemeral Exception and the ‘Three-Step Test’” (2005-2006), 19 I.P.J.
521, at pp. 530-32; J. S. McKeown, Fox on Canadian Law of Copyright and
Industrial Designs (4th ed. (loose-leaf)), at pp. 23-62 and 23-63. Thus,
the scope of ss. 30.8 and 30.9 was specific and deliberate. Parliament could
have adopted broader provisions. It chose not to. It is not for the Court to do
by “interpretation” what Parliament chose not to do by enactment.
[54]
The necessary implication of s. 30.7 , also
enacted in 1997, is that it absolves incidental, non-deliberate, inclusion of a
work from infringement — a sterile provision and of no practical effect had
Parliament considered incidental inclusion to be outside s. 3(1) (d) in
the first place. There is no doubt that this provision applies to
broadcasting, among other activities, and that the use of broadcast-incidental
copies is deliberate and thus not exempted. See D. Vaver, Intellectual
Property Law: Copyright, Patents, Trade-marks (2nd ed. 2011), at p. 223.
[55]
Although made in the process of broadcasting,
these broadcast-incidental copies nevertheless trigger the reproduction right.
They are not exempted by ss. 30.8 and 30.9 . There is nothing in the text,
context or legislative history of these provisions (or s. 3(1) ) that
supports the view that the broadcasting process obviates the fact that broadcast-incidental
copies are reproductions under the Copyright Act . Arguments based on
purpose in the form of technological neutrality and balance are advanced to
come to the opposite conclusion, but purposive construction is a tool of
statutory interpretation to assist in understanding the meaning of the text. It
is not a stand-alone basis for the Court to develop its own theory of what it
considers appropriate policy. Accordingly, the Board was correct in proceeding
on the basis that broadcast incidental copies engage the reproduction right
under s. 3(1) (d) of the Copyright Act .
(2)
The Synchronization Licence Between CBC and
SODRAC Does Not Imply a Licence to Make Broadcast-Incidental Copies
[56]
CBC argues in the alternative that if a licence
covering CBC’s broadcast-incidental copies is required, it should be implied
from CBC’s synchronization licences or the synchronization licences of third
party producers. To hold otherwise, CBC asserts, would be to render
synchronization licences “economically sterile” and would allow SODRAC to
engage in “non-neutral royalty stacking”: A.F., at paras. 99-100.
[57]
CBC’s economic argument is based on the
proposition that “a single master copy [made under a synchronization licence]
is useless without a corresponding implied licence to make the necessary
broadcast-incidental copies”: A.F., at para. 100. Instead, it argues that a
“technologically-neutral approach to a synchronization licence is one that
implies the necessary incidental rights in order to achieve the licence’s agreed-upon
purpose”: A.F., at para. 100.
[58]
I cannot agree. To the extent CBC’s
implied-licence argument turns on the language of SODRAC’s actual
synchronization licences, these licences do not give any indication that they
ought to be read to include the right to make broadcast-incidental copies. To
the contrary, the Board found that “[v]irtually all SODRAC licences issued to
producers that were filed in these proceedings clearly specify, in one form or
another, that the producer cannot authorize copies made by broadcasters,
distributors and other exhibitors”: Statutory Licence Decision, at para. 73.
[59]
Nor am I persuaded that licences to make
broadcast-incidental copies should be implied under synchronization licences
more generally, lest the synchronization licences be rendered sterile.
Synchronization licences are intended to facilitate the production of
audiovisual works. That these works may ultimately be destined for broadcast
does not make the production of the single master copy itself “useless”. A
stand-alone synchronization right is far from useless when held by an
independent producer who synchronizes a song into a master copy and then sells
or licences the finished product to a broadcaster. In that case, the primary
purpose of the master copy, from the perspective of the producer, was not for
it to be broadcast, but for it to be sold or licensed to a broadcaster. The
synchronization licence is sufficient to meet the needs of such a producer.
[60]
Further, the Board identified certain economic
considerations that it found justified the practice of dividing synchronization
and broadcast-incidental copy licences into separate payments. Separate
licensing of synchronization and broadcast-incidental copies allows producers
to “remain free to decide whether they wish to offer a turnkey service for the
audiovisual works they licence, or whether they wish to pay only for the rights
they use” (Statutory Licence Decision, at para. 83), a choice that may be
particularly valuable for smaller producers with modest licensing budgets.
[61]
In this case, the Board’s decision does not
raise the spectre of “double dipping”. The terms of the licence set by the
Board expressly protected against this possibility here. The 2008-2012
statutory licence includes a discount provision by which CBC’s licence payments
for broadcast-incidental copying may be reduced to the extent that it
broadcasts programs for which the producer has already cleared reproduction
rights on a through-to-the-viewer basis: s. 5.03(2). Though, as the Federal
Court of Appeal noted, the Board’s original discount formula was flawed (paras.
74-82), the formula, as amended by the Federal Court of Appeal, adequately
guards against concerns that SODRAC may engage in double dipping by charging
multiple parties for the same authorization.
[62]
CBC’s attempts to cast the implied-licence issue
in terms of the principle of technological neutrality are unavailing. CBC has
failed to highlight exactly how SODRAC’s desired practice of disaggregating
synchronization and broadcast-incidental licensing would offend the principle
as it has been understood by this Court. Separation of licences into
synchronization and broadcast-incidental arrangements does not, on its own,
impose a “gratuitous cost” based on formal technological distinctions, as was
the concern in ESA.
[63]
Nor does technological neutrality stand for the
proposition, as CBC urges, that the Copyright Act prohibits the creation
of “additional layers of royalties at the behest of collective societies” such
that disaggregating synchronization and broadcast-incidental copying is legally
impermissible: A.F., at para. 105. This argument reads ESA too broadly.
The difference between synchronization copies and broadcast-incidental copies
is tied to the fundamentally distinct activities of production and
broadcasting. They are different functions. This difference is not based on
particular technological details; it would exist regardless of the technologies
used either to produce or to broadcast. Thus, a decision recognizing production
and broadcasting as distinct activities, and thus as the valid subject of
disaggregated licences, does not offend the principle that “an additional layer
of protections and fees” not be imposed based solely on technological change: ESA,
at para. 9.
[64]
Accordingly, it was reasonable for the Board to
decline to identify an implied licence to engage in broadcast-incidental
copying within the synchronization licences underlying the programs that CBC
broadcasts.
C.
In Not Taking Into Account the Principles of
Technological Neutrality and Balance in Its Valuation Analysis, the Board’s
Decision Was Unreasonable
(1)
The Principle of Technological Neutrality is
Relevant to Questions of Valuation
[65]
CBC asserts that the Board erred in failing to
conduct its valuation analysis in accordance with the principle of
technological neutrality. SODRAC argues that, once it has been established that
a copying activity engages the reproduction right, the principle of
technological neutrality is spent and has no bearing on valuation.
[66]
The principle of technological neutrality is
recognition that, absent parliamentary intent to the contrary, the Copyright
Act should not be interpreted or applied to favour or discriminate against
any particular form of technology. It is derived from the balancing of user and
right-holder interests discussed by this Court in Théberge — 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. Because this long-standing principle informs the Copyright Act
as a whole, it must be maintained across all technological contexts: “The
traditional balance between authors and users should be preserved in the
digital environment . . .” (ESA, at para. 8).
[67]
In the regulatory context, the principle of
technological neutrality applies to valuation of a reproduction licence, just
as it does in determining whether an activity implicates copyright at all. The
Board operates pursuant to the Copyright Act , and in its regulatory role
of fixing royalties under s. 70.2 , it may not simply set aside the principles
that guide its interpretation of the Act once it has begun its valuation
analysis. While the Board’s valuation analysis will vary according to the facts
of each case, it is unreasonable for the Board to ignore the principle of
technological neutrality in that analysis in cases where it is implicated.
[68]
Indeed, it would be inconsistent to require a
technologically neutral interpretation of the Copyright Act but
not require a technologically neutral application of the Act. As Professor
Vaver has written, “Copyright law should strive for technological neutrality”:
p. 172. Interpretation and application of the Act are both important in seeking
this objective.
[69]
In reviewing the Board’s decision, the Court of
Appeal remarked upon the principle of technological neutrality, but declined to
apply it, as that court felt that it had insufficient guidance from this Court
on how it should be applied. These reasons aim to provide such guidance.
(2)
Technological Neutrality in Valuation
[70]
Because rights holders have the exclusive right
to reproduce their works under s. 3(1) (d), they are entitled to be
justly compensated for the use of that right. One element of just compensation is
an appropriate share of the benefit that the user obtains by using reproductions
of their copyright-protected work in the operation of the user’s technology.
That just compensation must be valued, however, in accordance with the
principle of technological neutrality. While highly unlikely, where users are
deriving the same value from the use of reproductions of copyright-protected
works using different technologies, technological neutrality implies that it
would be improper to impose higher copyright-licensing costs on the user of one
technology than would be imposed on the user of a different technology. To do
so would privilege the interests of the rights holder to a greater degree in
one technology over the other where there is no difference between the two in
terms of the value each user derives from the reproductions.
[71]
The converse is also true. Where the user of one
technology derives greater value from the use of reproductions of copyright-protected
work than another user using reproductions of the copyright-protected work in a
different technology, technological neutrality will imply that the copyright
holder should be entitled to a larger royalty from the user who obtains such
greater value. Simply put, it would not be technologically neutral to treat
these two technologies as if they were deriving the same value from the
reproductions.
[72]
In determining whether a separate communication
right was engaged in ESA, this Court held that technological neutrality
required the consideration of the difference between the old and new forms of
delivery of works. In the absence of any difference between them, no separate
right was engaged: “In our view, there is no practical difference between
buying a durable copy of the work in a store, receiving a copy in the mail, or
downloading an identical copy using the Internet. The Internet is simply a
technological taxi that delivers a durable copy of the same work to the end
user”: ESA, at para. 5. Similarly, in the valuation of a right,
technological neutrality requires that different technologies using
reproductions of copyright-protected work that produce the same value to the
users should be treated the same way. Conversely, different technologies using
reproductions that produce different values should not be treated the same way.
[73]
In this case, if CBC derives greater value from
the use of broadcast‑incidental copies in its digital technology than it
did under its prior analog technology, this is a factor in favour of the
copyright holder being entitled to greater royalties for use of its copyright-protected
work in CBC’s digital technology. Technological neutrality requires that the
Board compare the value derived from the use of reproduction in the two
technologies in its valuation analysis. As will be explained, it did not do so
in this case, nor did it take into account the principle of balance, to which I
now turn.
(3)
Balance in Valuation
[74]
It is well established that copyright law
maintains “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” of those works: Théberge, at para. 30. This
balance “lies not only in recognizing the creator’s rights but in giving due
weight to their limited nature. In crassly economic terms it would be as
inefficient to overcompensate artists and authors for the right of reproduction
as it would be self-defeating to undercompensate them”: Théberge, at
para. 31.
[75]
When it is tasked with fixing licence fees, the
Board must have regard to factors it considers relevant in striking a balance
between the rights of users and right holders. Relevant factors will include,
but are not limited to, the risks taken by the user, the extent of the
investment the user made in the new technology, and the nature of the
copyright-protected work’s use in the new technology. The Board must assess the
respective contributions of, on the one hand, the risks taken by the user and
the investment made by the user, and on the other hand, the reproductions of
the copyright-protected works, to the value enjoyed by the user. In this case,
where the financial risks of investing in and implementing new technology were
undertaken by the user and the use of reproductions of copyright-protected
works was incidental, the balance principle would imply relatively low licence
fees to the copyright holder. As will be explained, the Board’s valuation
methodology did not give any indication that the principles of technological
neutrality and balance were considered in the way it fixed the SODRAC
reproduction royalties payable by CBC on the basis of the SODRAC/SOCAN ratio.
[76]
Justice Abella argues that the extent of the
investment made by the user in its technology and the risks undertaken in
relation to that technology are “unrelated and irrelevant to the rights held in
the protected works”: para 180. I cannot agree. In an unregulated market, a
commercial user will always consider whether it makes economic sense to pay the
licence fee demanded by the copyright holder. A licence fee that precludes the
user from recovering what it considers an adequate return on its investment in
its technology will result in there being no licence and no royalty. In the
regulated context, it is the Board that must take account of such considerations.
They are far from irrelevant.
[77]
Contrary to what Justice Abella asserts, it will
never be the case that, because a user makes a significant investment in
technology or assumes substantial risk, royalties for the rights holder will
amount to zero. From the moment the right is engaged, licence fees will
necessarily follow. The amount of the fee will depend upon the Board’s
consideration of the evidence in each case, always having regard to the
principles of technological neutrality and balance and any other factors it
considers relevant.
[78]
Justice Abella also says that these reasons
represent “a significant departure from the principle [of technological
neutrality] as it was articulated in Entertainment Software Association”:
para. 181. The issue in ESA (and Rogers) was whether the
telecommunication right was engaged; whether one technology achieved a result
more efficiently than another was irrelevant to whether the right was engaged.
[79]
Here, where the right is engaged, the issue
becomes one of valuation of that right, and the principles of technological
neutrality and balance must be adapted to the valuation context. When it is
tasked with determining the value of a right, an important consideration for
the Board is the value of that right to the user. The value of the use of
reproductions in one technology may stem from functional differences from use
in another technology. Value differences may also stem from internal
efficiencies between technologies. Ignoring internal efficiencies would result
in rights holders being denied additional royalties when the use of their
copyrighted work in the more efficient technology confers greater value to the
user of that technology. This would hardly constitute “gratuitous fees”, as
asserted by Justice Abella: para. 182.
(4)
The Board Did Not Consider the Principle of
Technological Neutrality or Balance in Setting the Value of CBC’s Broadcast-Incidental
Copying Licence With SODRAC
(a)
The Board’s Statutory Licence Decision
[80]
The Board received a detailed picture of the
structure of both CBC and Astral’s broadcast systems, the copies that were made
in those systems, and what purposes they served, largely through the testimony
and report of Dr. Michael Murphy and CBC’s responses to interrogatories. Further,
CBC and Astral’s statement of the case before the Board expressly identified
technological neutrality as a relevant consideration:
The Board must apply the principle of technological
neutrality. One should not artificially introduce technology issues that are
unrelated to the nature of the work being valued. To the knowledge of Astral
and SRC/CBC, there is not a single television producer in North America who has
ever been required by a composer, screenwriter or other rights holder to pay a
greater license fee for music because of alleged technological efficiencies.
These are simply irrelevant considerations in the marketplace in view of the
nature of the work being licensed. There is no reason for broadcasters to be
treated any differently because the issue is brought before the Board. [A.R.,
vol. II, at pp. 190-91]
[81]
Neither the record nor the Board’s Statutory
Licence Decision, in which it used a ratio based on the royalties CBC pays to
the Society of Composers, Authors and Music Publishers of Canada (‟SOCANˮ)
to license performance rights to determine SODRAC royalties, gives any
indication that the Board considered balance and technological neutrality in
arriving at a valuation of the copyright-protected work. There is no indication
that the relative value derived from the use of copyright-protected works in
CBC’s digital technology as compared to its prior analog technology, or the
relative contributions of the CBC and SODRAC to the analog and digital
technologies were considered.
[82]
The Board concluded in this case that, “[s]ince
these [digital content-management] technologies involve the use of additional
copies, some of the benefits associated with the technologies must be reflected
in the remuneration that flows from these incidental, additional copies”:
Statutory Licence Decision, at para. 81. The value the Board ascribed to the
uses of broadcast-incidental copies by CBC seems to have been based, at least
to some extent, on the fact that more copies were being made under CBC’s
digital content-management system, although the valuation formula the Board
prescribed does not appear to be related to the use of additional copies.
(b)
The Federal Court of Appeal Decision
[83]
The Federal Court of Appeal summarized the
Board’s approach as finding that, “[s]imply put, more copies mean more value
and thus, more royalties”: para. 28. The court ultimately upheld the Board’s
approach: para. 49. The notion that “more copies mean more value and thus, more
royalties” is appealing in its simplicity. However, it is out of step with the
principles of technological neutrality and balance.
[84]
The making of broadcast incidental copies
cannot be equated with, for example, the copying of books. With a book, the
author expects a return for the original expression that the Copyright Act
has encouraged him to expend in producing the work. If copyright is infringed
by the making and sale of unlicensed copies, an arithmetic approach
(aggregating each lost royalty on each lost sale) would be one way of measuring
the resulting loss.
[85]
However, where additional copies are made and
used internally in an improved or more efficient broadcasting process, they are
only made to render the process feasible. This process might only allow the
user to keep up with the competition by reducing costs or by saving time, for
example. It might even only allow the user of the copies to limit its losses.
This is far from benefits that are proportional to the number of copies made.
The Federal Court of Appeal set out a fair reading of ESA when it
described it as establishing that “[t]echnological neutrality is determined by
functional equivalence”: para. 39. I would add that, to the extent the Federal
Court of Appeal suggested that the principle is concerned only with delivery of
works, it read the principle too narrowly. The Copyright Act as a whole
is to be read having regard to the principles of technological neutrality and
balance, unless its text indicates otherwise. ESA’s focus on delivery of
works was a specific application of the general principle, based on the
questions presented in that case; the principle is not confined to that
context.
[86]
The context here is the fixing of royalties by
the Board under s. 70.2 of the Act. In that context,
adherence to the principles of technological neutrality and balance require
that account be taken of the value that the reproductions of the
copyright-protected work contribute in the digital as compared to the analog
technology, and of the relative contributions of the reproductions and the
user’s investment and risk in providing the new technology.
(c)
The History of the Board’s 1:3.2 Ratio
[87]
A review of the history of the Board’s valuation
methodology does not give any indication that the principles of technological
neutrality and balance were considered, either explicitly or implicitly. The
Board calculated the broadcast-incidental copy fee by setting it at 31.25
percent of the fee CBC pays to SOCAN to license performance rights, for a ratio
between broadcast-incidental copying fees and performance fees of 1:3.2, which,
expressed as a percentage, is 31.25 percent, subject to repertoire adjustment.
The Board selected this 1:3.2 ratio based on its earlier use in a series of
cases setting the relative values of broadcast-incidental copying and
performance royalties in the commercial radio context. The Board in this case
found the ratio to be equally applicable to the television context: para. 109.
[88]
The 1:3.2 ratio has its origins in the Board’s
2003 decision regarding commercial radio licence fee: Statement of Royalties
to be Collected by CMRRA/SODRAC Inc. for the Reproduction of Musical Works, in
Canada, by Commercial Radio Stations in 2001, 2002, 2003 and 2004, decision
of the Board, March 28, 2003 (online) (“Commercial Radio 2003”). In that
matter, the Board was tasked with setting tariffs for broadcast-incidental
copying in the commercial radio context.
[89]
The Board considered three factors that it found
relevant in supporting the tariff rate it ultimately selected. First, it found
that the existence of the reproduction right “tends to plead in favour of a
royalty that is more than nominal, even though its use in the course of
broadcasting operations is secondary to broadcasting”: Commercial Radio 2003,
at p. 13. Second, it found that “the use of new broadcasting techniques lowers
costs for radio stations. Copying music to a hard drive optimizes the use of these
new techniques, thus entitling rights holders to a fair share of the
efficiencies arising from this reproduction”: ibid., at p. 13. Third,
the Board found the “optional” nature of the tariff (insofar as radio stations
could avoid the tariff by declining to make broadcast-incidental copies)
allayed concerns that a high tariff might discourage innovation in broadcasting
techniques: ibid., at p. 13.
[90]
The Board then weighed these factors and
concluded that a base rate of 1 percent of the user’s gross revenues was
appropriate, subject to adjustment based on repertoire size: Commercial
Radio 2003, at p. 14. At the time, SOCAN was entitled to a performance
tariff of 3.2 percent of gross revenues, thus establishing a ratio of
broadcast-incidental copying and performance tariffs at 1:3.2.
[91]
In 2010, the Board was again tasked with setting
reproduction and performance royalties to be paid to collective rights
organizations for commercial radio activities: Statement of Royalties to be
Collected by SOCAN, Re:Sound, CSI, AVLA/SOPROQ and Artisti in Respect of
Commercial Radio Stations, decision of the Board, July 9, 2010
(online) (“Commercial Radio 2010”). In that matter, the Board reaffirmed
the 1:3.2 ratio, underscored the fact that this ratio was supported in part
based on the efficiency gains realized through digital technology, and applied
it to set tariffs for broadcast-incidental copying: para. 223.
(d)
The Application of Technological Neutrality and
Balance to the Valuation Analysis
[92]
It is evident both from the Board’s reasons in
this case and the reasoning underlying the historical use of the 1:3.2 ratio
that the valuation of the licence fee covering CBC’s broadcast-incidental
copying did not apply a valuation method consistent with the principle of
technological neutrality because there was no comparison of the value
contributed by the copyright-protected reproductions as between CBC’s prior
technology and its new digital technology. It also failed to take into account
the relative contributions made by the use of copyright-protected works and the
risk and investment by the user in its digital technology, as required by the
balance principle.
[93]
One may argue that the complexities of
technological systems and business models mean there is no objective way to
determine how much of the value generated by a technologically dependent system
should be allocated to right holders and how much should be allocated to the
user, in view of technological neutrality and balance. It is the Board’s duty
to apply the principles of technological neutrality and balance in a reasonable
and coherent manner. Whenever the Board engages in the valuation of a licence
or tariff, it arrives at a determination by applying its experience and
expertise to weigh evidence that may not be reducible to an objective economic
valuation. This difficulty, however, should not mean that the Board cannot
carefully consider expert evidence, the availability of any suitable proxies,
and other relevant considerations in arriving at a reasonable valuation.
Overall, the Board’s valuation analysis must comport with the Copyright Act ’s
fundamental requirement to recognize technological neutrality and balance
between user and right-holder interests. In licence proceedings where
technological neutrality and balance are relevant, it will be for the Board to
establish how evidence bearing on these principles will be presented. Since a
party is generally required to provide evidence of what is necessary to support
its claim, the Board may well consider placing the onus on the right holder to
assert how the use of a copyright-protected work should justify its desired
licence fee, with the onus then on the user to demonstrate why a lower fee is
justified.
[94]
I do not, however, attempt to dictate the
procedures the Board must follow in its licence proceedings, as it enjoys the
discretion to set its own procedures and practices in each case, subject to its
regulations as approved by the Governor in Council: Copyright Act, s.
66.6(1) .
[95]
There will no doubt be a degree of informed
judgment in the valuation analysis, as there is some amount of informed
judgment in all licence proceedings in which the Board is called upon to assign
monetary figures to uses of copyright-protected works whose value is not easily
quantified. Nevertheless, the Board must ground its decisions in the Copyright
Act , the principles of technological neutrality and balance, its expertise,
and the evidence before it.
[96]
I conclude that the Board’s decision was
unreasonable in that it did not consider how the principles of technological
neutrality and balance ought to have been reflected in the licence fees imposed
on CBC with regard to its television and Internet broadcast-incidental copying
activity. I would remit the
matter to the Board for reconsideration of those portions of the Statutory
Licence Decision that address these fees with instructions to conduct its
analysis in a manner that is consistent with technological neutrality and
balance, as discussed above.
D.
The Board’s Interim Decision
(1)
The Board’s “Status Quo” Approach Was Reasonable
[97]
The Board is empowered by s. 66.51 of the Copyright
Act to issue interim orders. The language of s. 66.51 is discretionary:
“The Board may, on application, make an interim decision.” The statute
provides no further indication of how the Board is to exercise its discretion
in issuing or choosing not to issue interim decisions.
[98]
In issuing its Interim Licence Decision, the
Board observed that “[a]n interim decision serves chiefly to avoid the negative
consequences caused by the length of the proceedings and may serve to avoid the
legal vacuums created when protected works are used without authorization”:
para. 17. In its opinion, “the best way to achieve the objectives of an interim
decision is to maintain the status quo while avoiding a legal vacuum”, unless a
balance of convenience indicates that a change to the status quo is
appropriate: para. 18.
[99]
I am unpersuaded by CBC’s argument that the
Board’s approach to identifying the status quo and using it as the basis for an
interim licence has impermissibly “fettered its discretion by adopting an
overly restrictive definition of the status quo”: A.F., at para. 139. The
Board’s approach allows it to avoid the uncertainty and legal vacuums that
would occur in the absence of an interim decision, and the use of the licence
terms in effect immediately prior to the entering into effect of the interim
decision provides for continuity between the previous arrangement and the
interim licence. Further, the Board’s acknowledgment that factors may sometimes
justify departing from the status quo where indicated by the balance of
convenience provides that the Board has not completely fettered its discretion.
[100]
I find nothing unreasonable in the Board’s
approach to identifying and using the 2008-2012 statutory licence as the status
quo in this case. However, in view of the fact that I would remit the matter
for reconsideration of the 2008-2012 licence as set out above, it will be
necessary for the Board to reconsider the terms of the interim statutory
licence to ensure that it is consistent with the Board’s redetermination of the
2008-2012 licence fee.
(2)
The Board May Not Compel a User to Agree to the
Terms of a Licence Against the Will of the User
[101]
CBC argues that, while the Board may fix the
royalties to be paid under the statutory licensing procedure created by s. 70.2
of the Copyright Act , the Board may not set the other terms or structure
of that licence. Specifically, CBC takes issue with the Board’s decision to
impose an interim licence on a blanket basis, such that CBC pays for access to
the entire SODRAC repertoire, rather than on CBC’s preferred transactional
basis, whereby CBC would pay only whenever it actually used a work from the
SODRAC repertoire. A blanket licence grants access to SODRAC’s entire repertoire
for its duration, and thus reduces CBC’s ability to control its licensing
costs. Under a transactional licence, by contrast, CBC may choose in any given
situation whether it wishes to license a particular work or forego making use
of SODRAC music. CBC argues that if the collective organization and the user
disagree over the model a licence is to take — blanket or transactional — the
Board lacks the power to compel the execution of a licence.
[102]
SODRAC counters that the Board has the power to
issue licences in either blanket or transactional form, and should have this
power in all proceedings under s. 70.2 . To hold otherwise, it argues, would be
“to make the Board’s remedial jurisdiction under section 70.2 dependent upon
the consent of a user, [and] would be at odds with its mandate to resolve
disputes”: R.F., at para. 133.
[103]
Though CBC first raised this issue in the
context of the Board’s Interim Licence Decision, the dispute relates generally
to the Board’s power to structure licences, whether interim or not: Does the
Board’s power to set the terms of a licence include the power to bind the
parties to those terms?
[104]
I do not read the Copyright Act to
necessitate that decisions made pursuant to the Board’s licence-setting
proceedings under s. 70.2 have a binding effect against users. Section 70.2(1)
itself provides that where a collective organization and a user cannot agree on
the terms of a licence, either party may apply to the Board to “fix the
royalties and their related terms and conditions”. This grant of power speaks
of the Board’s authority to set down in writing a set of terms that, in its
opinion, represent a fair deal to license the use of the works at issue. It
says nothing, however, about whether these terms are to be binding against the
user.
[105]
The statutory context supports the conclusion
that licences crafted pursuant to s. 70.2 proceedings are not automatically
binding on users. Section 70.4 of the Act provides:
70.4 Where any royalties are fixed for a period pursuant to subsection
70.2(2), the person concerned may, during the period, subject to the
related terms and conditions fixed by the Board and to the terms and conditions
set out in the scheme and on paying or offering to pay the royalties, do the
act with respect to which the royalties and their related terms and conditions
are fixed and the collective society may, without prejudice to any other
remedies available to it, collect the royalties or, in default of their
payment, recover them in a court of competent jurisdiction.
[106]
This provision makes it clear that a user whose
copying activities were the subject of a s. 70.2 proceeding may avail
itself of the terms and conditions established by the Board as a way to gain
authorization to engage in the activity contemplated in the Board proceeding.
The language of s. 70.4 does not, of its own force, bind the user to the terms
and conditions of the licence.
[107]
The conclusion that Board licences established
pursuant to s. 70.2 are not binding on users comports with the more general
legal principle that “no pecuniary burden can be imposed upon the subjects of
this country, by whatever name it may be called, whether tax, due, rate or
toll, except upon clear and distinct legal authority”: Gosling v. Veley
(1850), 12 Q.B. 328, 116 E.R. 891, at p. 407, as approved and adopted in Ontario
English Catholic Teachers’ Assn. v. Ontario (Attorney General), 2001 SCC
15, [2001] 1 S.C.R. 470, at para. 77, and Attorney-General v. Wilts United
Dairies, Ltd. (1921), 37 T.L.R. 884 (C.A.), at p. 885. To bind a user to a
licence would be to make it liable according to its terms and conditions should
it engage in the covered activity. In the absence of clear and distinct legal
authority showing that this was Parliament’s intent, the burdens of a licence
should not be imposed on a user who does not consent to be bound by its terms.
[108]
SODRAC’s framing of the issue is not entirely
wrong: the Board does have the power under s. 70.2 to “fix the royalties and
their related terms and conditions”. That is, the Board may decide upon a fair
royalty to be paid should the user decide to engage in the activity at issue
under the terms of a licence. However, this power does not contain within it
the power to force these terms on a user who, having reviewed the terms,
decided that engaging in licensed copying is not the way to proceed. Of course,
should the user then engage in unauthorized copying regardless, it will remain
liable for infringement. But it will not be liable as a licensee unless it
affirmatively assumes the benefits and burdens of the licence.
[109]
The matter is complicated considerably by the
fact that the Board’s statutory licence decisions have, in recent years, taken
on an increasingly retroactive character. CBC’s statutory licence in this case
provides an example: the licence covers the period from November 2008 to March
2012, but the Board’s final decision was issued on November 2, 2012, after the
term of the licence had expired. In situations like these, the Board may issue
interim licences that seek to fill the legal vacuum before the final decision
is ready, but this leaves a user to operate based on assumptions about how
their ultimate liability for actions taken during the interim period will be
evaluated.
[110]
Should a user engage in copying activity under
an interim licence, and then find itself presented with a final licence whose
terms it would not voluntarily assume, the user is left in a difficult
position: accept the terms of an undesirable licence, or decline the licence
and retroactively delegitimize the covered activity engaged in during the
interim period, risking an infringement suit. This dilemma may mean that a user
who operates under an interim licence has no realistic choice but to
assume the terms of the final licence.
[111]
While I find this possibility troubling, I do
not find that this result would detract from the more general proposition that
there is no legal basis on which to hold users to the terms of a licence
without their assent. The licence is not de jure binding against users,
even if the particulars of a specific proceeding, and a user’s decision to
engage in covered activity during an interim period, may mean that the user
does not de facto have a realistic choice to decline the licence.
[112]
I conclude that the statutory licensing scheme
does not contemplate that licences fixed by the Board pursuant to s. 70.2
should have a mandatory binding effect against users. However, this case does
not require this Court to decide whether the same is true of collective organizations.
It may be that the statutory scheme’s focus on regulating the actions of
collective organizations, and the case law’s focus on ensuring that such
organizations do not devolve into “instruments of oppression and extortion” (Vigneux
v. Canadian Performing Right Society, Ltd., [1943] S.C.R. 348, at p. 354,
per Duff J., quoting Hanfstaengl v. Empire Palace, [1894] 3 Ch. 109, at
p. 128) would justify finding that the Board does have the power to bind
collective organizations to a licence based on the user’s preferred model —
transactional or blanket — on terms that the Board finds fair in view of that
model. However, this issue was not argued in this case.
[113]
I find that licences fixed by the Board do not
have mandatory binding force over a user; the Board has the statutory authority
to fix the terms of licences pursuant to s. 70.2 , but a user retains the
ability to decide whether to become a licensee and operate pursuant to that
licence, or to decline.
VI.
Conclusion
[114]
The Board did not take account of the principles
of technological neutrality and balance in valuing the licence fees for CBC’s
television and Internet broadcast-incidental copies. I would allow the appeal,
set aside the 2008-2012 statutory licence as it relates to the valuation of
CBC’s television and Internet broadcast-incidental copies and remit the
Statutory Licence Decision to the Board for reconsideration of that valuation
in accordance with the principles of technological neutrality and balance.
[115]
To the extent that the interim licence fees were
based on the valuation of the broadcast-incidental copies in the 2008-2012
statutory licence, I would set aside the interim licence and remit the Interim
Licence Decision for reconsideration consistent with the principles guiding the
redetermination of the 2008-2012 licence.
[116]
CBC is entitled to its costs here and in the
Federal Court of Appeal.
The following are the reasons
delivered by
[117]
Abella J. (dissenting) — This appeal is based on a
decision by the Copyright Board to impose royalty fees on the Canadian Broadcasting
Corporation (CBC) for incidental copies required to be made in the process of
turning a television program into a broadcast. The imposition of such fees not
only violates the principle of technological neutrality endorsed by this Court
three years ago in Entertainment Software Association v. Society of
Composers, Authors and Music Publishers of Canada, [2012] 2 S.C.R. 231, it
distorts the accepted balance between the rights of copyright holders and the
public. The CBC already pays royalty fees for broadcasting rights. These
additional fees artificially raise the cost of broadcasting television
programs, resulting in an increased cost to consumers for the same product.
Attaching copyright liability to incidental copies created as a result of improvements
in broadcasting technologies penalizes broadcasters and the public for
utilizing new and improved technologies and artificially creates entitlements
to compensation for creators that were never intended to be given under the Copyright
Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-42 . The decision is, as a result,
unreasonable.
Background
[118]
The CBC, Canada’s public broadcaster, both
produces and broadcasts television programs. It broadcasts its own original
programs as well as programs that have been produced by third party producers.
[119]
The Society for Reproduction Rights of Authors,
Composers and Publishers in Canada (SODRAC) Inc. (SODRAC) is a collective
society operating under the Copyright Act . It administers the
reproduction rights held by its members in their musical works, namely, “the
sole right to produce or
reproduce the work or any substantial part thereof in any material form
whatever”: s. 3(1) . Notably, it does not administer
performance rights, which include broadcasting rights. SODRAC operates by
taking an assignment of its members’ reproduction rights, and representing them
in negotiations with parties who seek to reproduce works in SODRAC’s
repertoire.
[120]
A producer of television programming
incorporates musical works into an audiovisual program. The CBC pays royalties
to SODRAC for the right to incorporate musical works in SODRAC’s repertoire
into its television programs. The process of incorporation is called
synchronization. It is a multi-step process which currently requires the
creation of between 12 and 20 incidental copies of the work in order to produce
the final synchronized “master” copy of the television program. Once the
synchronization process is complete, there will be a single master copy of the
synchronized program that the producer provides to the broadcaster, usually on
a digital medium such as a CD or digital tape.
[121]
In order to lawfully reproduce the musical works
during synchronization, a producer must obtain a synchronization licence from
the holder of the reproduction right in the musical works. In Canada,
SODRAC has a virtual monopoly over reproduction rights of French-language
music. SODRAC issues synchronization licences to producers, allowing them to
make any reproductions necessary to create a synchronized audiovisual work. If
the CBC synchronizes a television program using music from SODRAC’s repertoire,
it is required to have a synchronization licence from SODRAC. If it receives
television programming from a third party producer, it is the third party
producer who is required to have the synchronization licence.
[122]
SODRAC holds only the reproduction rights to the
works in its repertoire, it is not entitled to royalties associated with the
broadcasting of those works. Royalties for the right to broadcast the works are
paid instead to the Society of Composers, Authors and Music Publishers of
Canada (SOCAN), the collective society that administers the right to
communicate the musical works to the public by telecommunication. In order to
broadcast the synchronized television program, the CBC must obtain a
broadcasting licence from SOCAN.
[123]
Until its application to the Copyright Board in
this case, SODRAC had no entitlement to royalty fees for any aspect of
broadcasting the musical works.
[124]
Like the synchronization process, the process of
broadcasting the television program involves multiple steps, requiring the
creation of incidental copies of the work. These are known as
broadcast-incidental copies. The CBC makes broadcast-incidental copies of all
television programs it broadcasts, regardless of whether they are produced
in-house or by a third party.
[125]
The activity of broadcasting begins when the
digital content of the master copy is transferred to the broadcaster’s digital
content management system, which is the system that the broadcaster uses to manage
the storage, editing, and airing of the program.
[126]
Modern digital broadcasting systems consist of a
number of component parts, including a broadcast server hard drive (or series
of hard drives) for temporary storage of a copy of the program until it is
aired, a digital tape library for longer-term storage of the program (until
expiry of the broadcasting rights), computers and software packages used for
screening and editing the program in preparation to be aired, a video logger
used to capture a real-time copy of the aired program for compliance with the
Canadian Radio-Television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC)
requirements, and an automated content manager that gives instructions to the
system for moving the files to and from the various components.
[127]
The use of modern digital broadcasting systems
leads to the creation of broadcast-incidental copies of the programs, including
the incorporated musical works, because, in order for the digital program file
to exist on multiple components of the system at the same time, and to allow
for the simultaneous functioning of the various components of the broadcasting
system, multiple incidental copies of the program are necessarily created. The
initial transfer of the master copy onto the digital content management system,
for example, gives rise to a broadcast-incidental copy. More copies may be
created as part of the process of ensuring file format compatibility with the
broadcast server hard drives. Further copies will arise in the days
immediately before broadcast, as the synchronized television program is
temporarily copied from the digital tape library to the broadcast server hard
drive: decision of the Copyright Board, file Nos. 70.2-2008-01, 70.2-2008-02,
November 2, 2012 (online) (Statutory Licence Decision), at para. 54. While it
is still technically possible to deliver television broadcasts without the use
of servers and digital technologies, these technologies have become the norm
not the exception as a result of the efficiencies and added functionality that
they offer to broadcasters: Statutory Licence Decision, at para. 53.
[128]
More traditional broadcasting systems are analog
systems. Analog systems use analog media, not digital techniques, for storage,
reproduction, or transmission of the audiovisual program. An example of analog
media is the VHS tape, which is a magnetic tape. Analog broadcasting systems
formerly employed by television broadcasters also typically involved the
creation of broadcast-incidental copies resulting from the need to screen and
edit the programs before airing, as well as to create back-up copies. Analog
systems, however, resulted in fewer broadcast-incidental copies than are
created by modern digital broadcasting systems.
[129]
Modern digital broadcasting systems are much
more efficient than analog systems because in the digital domain, broadcasters
are able to compress and store much larger quantities of digital video
programming on server hard drives and digital tapes than could be reasonably
stored in a VHS tape library. Screening and editing the programs for closed
captioning and different languages are also more efficiently accomplished using
modern computer and software systems as opposed to analog systems.
[130]
Starting in 1998, SODRAC began requiring third
party producers to acquire a separate synchronization licence. Because
broadcasters who also produced audiovisual programs in-house, like the CBC,
were already required to hold a synchronization licence for the same work,
SODRAC initially did not charge third party producers any royalties for this
additional licence. In 2006, however, SODRAC abandoned this policy and began
charging producers full price for a synchronization licence, which now covered
only a right of “first integration”: Statutory Licence Decision, at para. 73. Under
this licence, producers paid royalties for the right to synchronize music into
a single master copy of the television program, but had no right to make
any downstream incidental copies such as broadcast-incidental copies.
These downstream copies, typically made by the broadcaster as they
readied the synchronized copy for broadcast, became subject to additional
royalties paid by the broadcasters. SODRAC’s new policy of monetizing
broadcasting activities through the imposition of royalties for broadcast-incidental
copies is what prompted this litigation.
[131]
In 1992, the CBC and SODRAC had a licence agreement
which authorized the CBC to reproduce works in SODRAC’s repertoire.
This licence allowed the CBC to synchronize musical works into audiovisual programs,
as well as to make any other incidental copies of the works including
production-incidental copies and broadcast-incidental copies. In 2008,
however, the CBC and SODRAC were unable to agree on the terms of a new licence
because SODRAC sought to monetize broadcast-incidental copies in addition to
the synchronization rights. SODRAC asked the Copyright Board to fix the
terms and conditions of a licence for the reproduction of musical works in its
repertoire pursuant to s. 70.2 of the Copyright Act .
[132]
The Board concluded that broadcast-incidental
copies implicated the reproduction right, and were therefore subject to
royalties. Because the new broadcasting technologies which required
additional broadcast-incidental copies generated benefits for the CBC by
keeping the broadcaster relevant and competitive, the Board concluded that this
benefit should be reflected in the compensation granted to the copyright
holders. The Board accordingly certified SODRAC’s proposed tariff and imposed
a licence on the CBC for 2008-2012 that included royalty fees for
the broadcast-incidental copies. The Board valued the broadcast-incidental
copies by tying them to the value of the royalties paid by the CBC to SOCAN for
the communication rights in the works. Under its 1992 licence, the CBC paid
annual royalties to SODRAC of $520,000; under the new Board-imposed
agreement, it would pay $1.2 million per year.
[133]
After the release of this decision, SODRAC
obtained an interim licence from the Board on the same terms for the 2012-2016
period.
[134]
The Federal Court of Appeal dismissed the CBC’s
application for judicial review of the Board’s decisions. Applying Bishop v.
Stevens, [1990] 2 S.C.R. 467, the Federal Court of Appeal concluded
that “ephemeral recordings of [the] performance of a work, made solely for the
purposes of facilitating that broadcast of the performance, were, if
unauthorized, an infringement of the copyright holder’s rights”. It refused to
apply the principle of technological neutrality articulated in this Court’s
decision in Entertainment Software Association.
Analysis
[135]
The issue in this appeal is whether SODRAC is
entitled to monetize broadcast-incidental copies despite the fact that SODRAC
has no entitlement to royalty fees for any aspect of broadcasting. To answer the
question requires knowing what a broadcast-incidental copy is.
[136]
In its decision, the Board defined incidental
copies as follows:
An incidental copy is necessary
or helpful to achieve an intended outcome but is not part of the outcome itself.
A production-incidental copy is made in the process of producing and
distributing an audiovisual work, either before or after the master copy is
made: it is a form of synchronization copy. A broadcast-incidental copy
is made to facilitate the broadcast of an audiovisual work or to preserve the
work in the broadcaster’s archives, while a distribution-incidental copy
is made for purposes of readying or preserving the motion picture for
distribution to the public: both are forms of post-synchronization copies.
[Underlining added; para. 12.]
[137]
A broadcast-incidental copy is created when the
content of the master copy of the synchronized television program is fed into
the broadcaster’s digital content management system. This creates a
high-resolution copy of the work. Once in the digital content management
system, a low-resolution working copy that is not of sufficient quality to be
broadcast will be used to facilitate editing the television program for such
things as on-air text translations or closed captioning. A further low-resolution
copy will be created for screening purposes by the programming, marketing, and
communications teams. When all technical treatments of the program have been
completed, another copy results from the digital file being reformatted to
create a broadcast file that is compatible with the CBC’s broadcast server hard
drives. Additional copies of the broadcast file are made when the file is
copied as needed from the digital tape library to the broadcast server hard
drives. While the program is being aired, a further copy is made as the aired
program is recorded in real time in order to comply with CRTC regulatory
requirements: see Television Broadcasting Regulations, 1987,
SOR/87-49, s. 10(5). The initial high-resolution copy of the program, as well
as the low-resolution working copies, and the reformatted broadcast file, are
all broadcast-incidental copies made for the sole purpose of facilitating the
broadcasting of the audiovisual program.
[138]
The broadcast-incidental copies described above
are strictly technical in nature in that they are created solely for purposes
integral to the process of broadcasting television programs, and are not sold
or made available to the public, or used for any independent revenue-generating
purpose.
[139]
Broadcast-incidental copies are created in order
to achieve the central activity of broadcasting by providing the technical
modalities to achieve the broadcast and to comply with regulatory requirements.
In the context of copyright law, their creation cannot be seen as distinct from
the central activity of broadcasting without violating the principle of
technological neutrality.
[140]
This appeal concerns the scope of the
reproduction right set out in ss. 3(1) and 3(1) (d) of the Copyright
Act , which state:
3. (1) For the purposes of this
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,
and includes the sole right
. . .
(d) in the case
of a literary, dramatic or musical work, to make any sound recording,
cinematograph film or other contrivance by means of which the work may be mechanically
reproduced or performed,
[141]
The introductory paragraph of s. 3(1) articulates three distinct rights
held in protected works: the right to produce or reproduce (the reproduction
right); the right to perform, which includes broadcasting rights; and the right
to publish. The enumerated rights listed in s. 3(1) (a)-(j) are
illustrative of these three fundamental rights: Entertainment Software
Association, at para. 42.
[142]
As this Court observed in Entertainment Software Association,
Parliament has distinguished between the rights of reproduction and those of
performance/broadcasting. This distinction is drawn because a performance is,
by its nature, fleeting and impermanent, whereas a reproduction creates a
durable copy which takes on a life of its own: Entertainment Software
Association, at para. 35. The acts of performing/broadcasting and those of
reproducing a work engage two distinct interests for copyright holders. That is
why distinct collective societies administer these rights: Entertainment
Software Association, at para. 38.
[143]
It is not disputed that the broadcasting activities carried out by the
CBC fall within the broadcasting/performance right. The question in this appeal
is whether the technical means employed by the CBC to achieve the broadcasting
activity also fall within the scope of the reproduction right.
[144]
A reasonable interpretation of the scope of the reproduction right must
therefore consider the wording of ss. 3(1) and 3(1) (d) in the context of
the overarching purpose of the Copyright Act and the central principle
of technological neutrality.
[145]
The Copyright Act strikes a
careful balance between promoting the public interest in the encouragement and
dissemination of creative works and obtaining a just reward for creators: Théberge
v. Galerie d’Art du Petit Champlain inc., [2002] 2 S.C.R. 336, at para.
30. To tilt the balance too far towards protection of creators’ rights would
undermine the right of users to access and work with creative materials. To
tilt it too far towards access, on the other hand, would fail to provide a just
reward to creators, leading authors and their supporters to under-invest in
producing and distributing their works. At both ends of the spectrum, the
public loses some of the benefit of creative works: David Vaver, Intellectual
Property Law: Copyright, Patents, Trade-marks (2nd ed. 2011), at p. 60; Théberge,
at para. 31.
[146]
As this Court has consistently recognized,
maintaining the balance that best supports the public interest in creative
works is the central purpose of the Copyright Act : Society of
Composers, Authors and Music Publishers of Canada v. Canadian Assn. of Internet
Providers, [2004] 2 S.C.R. 427 (SOCAN v. CAIP),
at paras. 40-41; Robertson v. Thomson Corp., [2006] 2 S.C.R. 363, at
paras. 69-70; Euro-Excellence Inc. v. Kraft Canada Inc., [2007] 3
S.C.R. 20, at paras. 76-84; Society of Composers, Authors and Music
Publishers of Canada v. Bell Canada, [2012] 2 S.C.R. 326 (SOCAN v. Bell),
at paras. 8-11; Alberta (Education) v. Canadian Copyright Licensing Agency (Access
Copyright), [2012] 2 S.C.R. 345, at para. 19; Entertainment
Software Association, at paras. 7-8, per Abella and Moldaver JJ.,
for the majority, and paras. 47 and 123-25, per Rothstein J., dissenting; Rogers
Communications Inc. v. Society of Composers, Authors and Music Publishers of
Canada, [2012] 2 S.C.R. 283 (Rogers v. SOCAN), at
para. 40; Cinar Corporation v. Robinson, [2013] 3 S.C.R. 1168, at
paras. 23 and 28.
[147]
The question in this case, once again, is how to
preserve this balance in the face of new technologies that are transforming the
mechanisms through which creative works are produced, reproduced and
distributed. Francis Gurry, the Director General of the World Intellectual
Property Organization, explained the challenge to copyright policy posed by new
technologies as follows:
Underlying this process of
change is a fundamental question for society. It is the central question of
copyright policy. How can society make cultural works available to the widest
possible public at affordable prices while, at the same time, assuring a
dignified economic existence to creators and performers and the business
associates that help them to navigate the economic system? It is a question
that implies a series of balances: between availability, on the one hand, and
control of the distribution of works as a means of extracting value, on the
other hand; between consumers and producers; between the interests of society
and those of the individual creator; and between the short-term gratification
of immediate consumption and the long-term process of providing economic
incentives that reward creativity and foster a dynamic culture.
(“The
Future of Copyright”, speech delivered at the Blue Sky Conference: Future
Directions in Copyright Law, February 25, 2011 (online).)
[148]
The answer to this challenge, in my view, lies
in applying a robust vision of technological neutrality as a core principle of
statutory interpretation under the Copyright Act , drawing particularly
on this Court’s decision in Entertainment Software Association.
[149]
Such an approach finds its statutory origin in
s. 3(1) of the Copyright Act , which provides that copyright includes the
“sole right to produce or reproduce” a work or a substantial part of a work “in
any material form whatever”: see Entertainment Software Association,
at para. 5. Parliament has further signalled its support in the summary of
the Copyright Modernization Act, S.C. 2012, c. 20 , which states that the
amendments to the Act were intended to “ensure that it remains technologically
neutral”. These words signal Parliament’s intention that the Act must
adapt and apply to new technologies in a manner that maintains the careful
balance between creators and users that underpins the Act as a whole.
[150]
As an interpretive principle, technological
neutrality prizes substance over form by applying the Copyright Act so
that it “operates consistently, regardless of the form of the media involved,
or its technological sophistication”: SOCAN v. Bell, at para.
43. It arises in two different forms.
[151]
The first is the principle of media neutrality,
which aims to ensure that copyright doctrine evolves to embrace new
technologies. The basic premise of this principle is that “copyright subsists
not only in the medium in which the work is created but all existing and future
media in which the work might be expressed”: Cameron J. Hutchison, “Technological
Neutrality Explained & Applied to CBC v. SODRAC” (2015), 13 C.J.L.T.
101, at p. 110. As long as the creative expression survives the transfer to a
new medium, copyright in the work will survive. Media neutrality is not,
however, restricted to protecting creators’ rights across new media; it can
operate to protect the rights of users of copyrighted material across new media
as well. As this Court observed in Robertson:
Media
neutrality is reflected in s. 3(1) of the Copyright Act which describes
a right to produce or reproduce a work “in any material form whatever”. Media
neutrality means that the Copyright Act should continue to apply in
different media, including more technologically advanced ones. . . . Media
neutrality is not a licence to override the rights of authors — it exists to
protect the rights of authors and others as technology evolves. [Emphasis
added; para. 49.]
[152]
The second is the principle of functional
equivalence, which asks courts to focus on what the technology at issue
is doing, rather than on the technical modalities of how it is doing it
when interpreting the rights and exceptions set out in the Copyright Act :
Cameron J. Hutchison, “Case Comment: The 2012 Supreme Court Copyright Decisions
& Technological Neutrality” (2013), 46 U.B.C. L. Rev. 589, at p.
590. This principle guides courts to interpretations of the Act that
afford functionally equivalent technologies similar treatment, without getting
caught up in the modalities through which the work is delivered: Carys J.
Craig, “Technological Neutrality: (Pre)Serving the Purposes of Copyright Law”,
in Michael Geist, ed., The Copyright Pentalogy: How the Supreme Court of
Canada Shook the Foundations of Canadian Copyright Law (2013), 271, at p.
275. It also implies that, “where there is no clear and pre-existing
functional equivalent, courts should avoid emphasizing the details of
particular technological systems and instead interpret copyright’s core
concepts in a manner applicable across technologies”: Craig, at p. 275; see
also Deborah Tussey, “Technology Matters: The Courts, Media Neutrality, and New
Technologies” (2005), 12 J. Intell. Prop. L. 427; Gregory R. Hagen,
“Technological Neutrality in Canadian Copyright Law”, in The Copyright
Pentalogy, 307, at p. 317.
[153]
A functional approach to technological
neutrality “seeks to avoid imposing copyright liability on technologies and
activities that, while theoretically capable of being included under the Act,
only incidentally implicate copyright”: Hutchison (2015), at p. 113; see also
Craig. “[S]ubstance”, in other words, “trumps form”: Hutchison (2015), at p.
111; see also SOCAN v. CAIP. Or, as Maria A. Pallante, the Director of
the U.S. Copyright Office has observed, “new technologies have made it
increasingly apparent that not all reproductions are equal in the digital age.
Some copies are merely incidental to an intended primary use of a work,
including where primary uses are licensed, and these incidental copies should
not necessarily be treated as infringing”: “The Next Great Copyright Act”
(2013), 36 Colum. J.L. & Arts 315, at p. 325.
[154]
This aspect of technological neutrality finds
expression in a number of this Court’s recent rulings. In SOCAN v.
CAIP, for example, the Court considered whether the practice of caching
copies prevented Internet service providers from finding the protection of s.
2.4 of the Copyright Act , which insulates from liability those who
provide only the means of telecommunication “necessary for another
person to so communicate the work”. The Court concluded that Internet service
providers were shielded by s. 2.4 , even though their transmissions resulted in
the creation of cache copies. As Professor Hutchison summarizes in his 2015
article,
. . . the practice of caching was an
innovation that helped promote the dissemination of works (one of the goals of
copyright law) without interfering with the legitimate entitlements of
copyright owners. Incidental copies, in other words, were determined to lie
outside the reproduction right as the interests of technological economy and
efficiency trumped the making of mere technical copies that were imperceptible
to an end user. [Footnote omitted; p. 114.]
[155]
Similarly, in Entertainment Software
Association, this Court addressed the meaning of the communication
right set out in s. 3(1) (f) of the Copyright Act and concluded
that a separate communication tariff should not apply to downloaded copies of
musical works. Because it gives rise to a durable digital copy, the
downloading process is, at its core, an exercise of the reproduction right.
Simply because the copy arrived by way of Internet-based delivery did not mean
it was a communication under the Act. The central activity was the focus
of the legal analysis, not the incidental technological process by which it
took place.
[156]
Finally, in Rogers v. SOCAN, the
Court addressed whether music streamed via the Internet to individual users
constituted a communication “to the public” under s. 3(1) (f) of the Copyright
Act . In concluding that it did, Rothstein J. observed that the
“true character of the communication activity” and not its technicalities were
crucial to properly interpreting the meaning of “to the public”: para. 30. Copyright
protection should not depend “merely on the business model that the
alleged infringer chooses to adopt rather than the underlying communication
activity . . . [where] the end result is the same”: para. 40.
[157]
Together, these principles — media neutrality
and functional equivalence — work to protect the fine balance between users and
creators, between access and reward, enshrined in the Copyright Act . As
Professor Tussey observes, “To the extent that the copyright balance of
incentives and access has been appropriately set for a pre-existing technology,
similar treatment of functional equivalents should maintain that balance”: p.
479. The analysis of whether copyright attaches to a particular activity should
therefore focus on the essential nature of the activity or output, rather than
the process by which it occurs.
[158]
That is precisely why the cached copies at issue
in SOCAN v. CAIP, copies that were created as a result of the activities
of the Internet service providers, did not bring the providers beyond the
exception from liability for persons who provide only the means of
telecommunication necessary for another person to communicate a work. The
central activity of the providers was providing a conduit for communication,
and the cached copies were created solely for the purpose of delivering faster
and more economic service to internet users.
[159]
And it is why in Rogers v. SOCAN, although
a temporary copy of the music file is transmitted to the user’s hard drive as
part of the process of streaming music online, the Court treated the process of
streaming as an exercise of the telecommunications right, not as a separate
exercise of the reproduction right. Those temporary copies were considered to
form a technical part of the streaming process, and did not transform the
central activity of communicating the work by telecommunication.
[160]
And finally, it is why in Entertainment
Software Association, where SOCAN wanted to charge royalties for copies of
video games sold and delivered over the Internet despite being unable to charge
royalties for copies of video games sold in a store or shipped by mail, this
Court held that traditional and more technologically advanced forms of the same
activity should be treated equally under the Copyright Act :
The principle of technological
neutrality requires that, absent evidence of Parliamentary intent to the
contrary, we interpret the Copyright Act in a way that avoids imposing
an additional layer of protections and fees based solely on the method of
delivery of the work to the end user. To do otherwise would effectively
impose a gratuitous cost for the use of more efficient, Internet-based
technologies. [Emphasis in original; para. 9.]
[161]
Similarly, in this case, SODRAC is attempting to
claim royalties for the method of broadcasting the musical works to the
public, despite never before receiving royalties for broadcasting activities.
[162]
Technological neutrality — and specifically, the
principle of functional equivalence — is a crucial part of any reasonable
interpretation of the application of the reproduction right to
broadcast-incidental copies.
[163]
The CBC argued that SODRAC’s attempt to monetize
broadcast-incidental copies “represents a subversion of the purpose of the Copyright
Act in an attempt to generate economic rents through a layered licensing
scheme”.
[164]
I agree. The principle of technological
neutrality requires that the interpretation and application of the Copyright
Act focus on the essential character of the activity and not the
technical modalities by which it is achieved. The essential character of the broadcasting
activity does not change with the adoption of modern digital technologies that
are dependent on the creation of incidental copies in order to accomplish the
activity. Each broadcast-incidental copy is not a separate reproduction of the
work under the Act simply because the technical imperatives of
effecting a broadcast require the presence of multiple copies. They do
not, as a result, attract separate royalties. To conclude otherwise is to doom
both technological neutrality and the ability of copyright law to preserve the
delicate balance between the rights of copyright holders and the public’s
interest in the dissemination of creative works.
[165]
Traditionally, broadcasting was subject only to
communication fees. The Board’s decision to impose royalties on the CBC for the
creation of copies made incidental to the activity of broadcasting amounts to
finding that broadcasting in the digital era, as opposed to the pre-digital
era, should be subject to two fees for the same activity. As this Court
observed in Entertainment Software Association, this result harms both
end users of the works and copyright owners:
When a single economic
activity implicates more than one type of right and each type is administered
by a separate collective, the multiplicity of licences required can lead to
inefficiency. . . . The result is that the total price the user has to pay for
all complements is too high . . . .
. . .
. . . the fragmentation of
licences required for single activities among several monopolist-collectives
generates inefficiencies, from which copyright owners as a whole also suffer .
. . .
(Para.
11, quoting Ariel Katz, “Commentary: Is Collective Administration of Copyrights
Justified by the Economic Literature?”, in Marcel Boyer, Michael Trebilcock and
David Vaver, eds., Competition Policy and Intellectual Property (2009),
449, at pp. 461-63.)
[166]
Most pertinently, the Federal Court of Appeal
was wrong to suggest that “more copies mean more value and thus, more
royalties”. This, with respect, violates technological neutrality not only by
imposing additional copyright liability on the use of more efficient
copy-dependent broadcasting technologies which are functionally equivalent to
traditional broadcasting systems, but also by erroneously tying the
compensation owed to creators of copyrighted works to how efficiently the user
of those works exercises the right that was bargained for.
[167]
Moreover, broadcasters are required to make
certain broadcast-incidental copies in order to comply with CRTC regulations,
such as to keep a record of exactly what was broadcast in the event of a public
complaint or inquiry. Giving creators of broadcasted works additional copyright
compensation because the CBC, in order to have the right to broadcast, is
required to create incidental copies of the works for regulatory compliance
purposes, gives creators compensation for something they are not entitled to
under the Act.
[168]
It is, in fact, difficult to see how the
creation of broadcast-incidental copies implicates the legitimate reproduction
interests of the creators of the works in any way. These copies are, to borrow
the language of Entertainment Software Association, merely technological
taxis required for the delivery of the digital broadcast process. They are not
recordings which fix a particular embodiment of the protected works, they are
not delivered as durable copies to the viewer or listener, and they do not
alter the degree of control that the composer once had over how the work will
be presented to the public.
[169]
Excluding broadcast-incidental copies from the
scope of the reproduction right under s. 3(1) (d) of the Copyright
Act does nothing to prejudice the legitimate interests of copyright
holders. Virtually all of the composers represented by SODRAC for the
administration of reproduction rights in their works are also represented by
SOCAN for the administration of communication rights. It is hard to see how the
purposes of the Copyright Act are advanced by permitting the creators of
musical works to bargain at one table for royalties in exchange for the right
to broadcast their works, and then at another table for additional royalties
for the technical modalities by which that same right is exercised.
[170]
That is why I have difficulty accepting
Rothstein J.’s analysis. The result of his approach is to penalize broadcasters
for implementing advancements in broadcasting technologies by creating
artificial entitlements to compensation under the Copyright Act for
incidental activities that were never intended to be covered by the Act.
He begins his discussion of the scope of the reproduction right under s.
3(1) (d) with an acknowledgment that this Court’s understanding of the
purpose of the Copyright Act has evolved from the author-centric view
articulated in Bishop to that of maintaining the proper balance between
the rights of creators and the public interest in the encouragement and
dissemination of works of the arts and intellect. This balance involves not
only “recognizing the creator’s rights but in giving due weight to their
limited nature”: Théberge, at para. 31. He also acknowledges the role
that the principle of technological neutrality, as set out most recently by
this Court in Entertainment Software Association, plays in maintaining
that balance. To this extent, I agree with his reasons. What I cannot agree
with, however, is his finding that these fundamental principles of copyright
law have been ousted in this case by the language of the Copyright Act .
In so finding, he employs a literal approach to the interpretation of s. 3(1) (d),
reading the words of the provision without the benefit of the purpose and
context of the Act to ascertain its true meaning.
[171]
He points to ss. 30.8 and 30.9 of the Copyright
Act , which create finely calibrated and limited exceptions for
certain kinds of ephemeral recordings, as evidence of Parliament’s intention
that broadcast-incidental copies engage the reproduction right. His argument
is that, by virtue of creating these limited exceptions to the reproduction
right, Parliament was confirming that all other ephemeral and incidental
copies were protected under s. 3(1)(d) of the Act. Since the
broadcast-incidental copies at issue in this case are not among the specific
enumerated exceptions, Rothstein J. accepts SODRAC’s argument that they
necessarily engage the reproduction right set out in s. 3(1) (d).
[172]
There is a much more plausible explanation for
these narrow exceptions that better accords with the overarching purposes of
the Copyright Act . As SODRAC acknowledges, these amendments were
a legislative response to the Court’s 1990 decision in Bishop. In Bishop,
the Court was asked to determine whether the licensing of a performance right —
the right to broadcast a musical work — implicitly authorized ephemeral
recordings of a performance of the work for the purposes of effecting the
broadcast. The composer claimed that the pre-recorded tape of the performance
implicated the reproduction right. The defendant did not deny that such a copy
was made, but argued that it was “ephemeral” and, as such, should not attract
copyright liability. Applying a literal interpretation of s. 3(1) (d) to
conclude that the ephemeral recording engaged the composer’s reproduction
rights, this Court held that a separate reproduction licence was required.
[173]
Broadcasters sought corrective legislative
intervention. The results of their efforts were ss. 30.8 and 30.9 . Section
30.8 makes provision for broadcasters who have a right to broadcast a live
performance, but no right to make recordings of that performance. Subject to
specific conditions, it allows them to make temporary recordings of the
performance for the purpose of the broadcast without obtaining a second
permission from the copyright holder: Hugues G. Richard and Laurent Carrière,
eds., Canadian Copyright Act Annotated (loose-leaf), at pp. 30.8-9 and
30.8-10. Section 30.9 offers an exception for broadcasters who have a right to
broadcast a sound recording but no right to make copies of it. It allows the
broadcaster to convert a pre-recorded performance from one medium to
another if it is necessary for the purposes of broadcasting: Richard and
Carrière, at p. 30.9-7. These exceptions are subject to specific conditions,
including that the copy be made by the broadcaster itself for its own
broadcast; and that it cannot be synchronized with any other work or subject
matter. The parties agree that neither provision applies to the
broadcast-incidental copies at issue in this case.
[174]
These discrete legislative responses to a
specific judicial interpretation of the Copyright Act should not,
it seems to me, be mistaken for a Rosetta stone on the scope and meaning of the
reproduction right. And they are far from the express statutory language
required to displace such fundamental objectives and principles underpinning
the Copyright Act as technological neutrality and balance. The effect of
such an approach is to set a new precedent for statutory interpretation, one
that is contrary to the long-accepted approach which requires that we examine
the words of a statute “in their entire context”.
[175]
It is more credible, it seems to me, to
interpret ss. 30.8 and 30.9 as an effort to provide greater certainty
that certain classes of ephemeral recording are not to attract copyright
liability. They were a response to a decision of this Court in order to maintain
technological neutrality, not a comprehensive statement on the content
of the reproduction right, or which kinds of copies will trigger it. While ss.
30.8 and 30.9 are illustrative of the distinction between broadcasting and
reproduction rights and specifically identify certain classes of copies that do
not engage the reproduction right, they are, as exceptions, of limited value in
interpreting the scope of the reproduction right found in s. 3(1) , a provision
enacted many years earlier. To find otherwise would trap Parliament in an
interminable and losing game of catch-up with swift and unknown technological
currents.
[176]
This brings me to the effect of Bishop on
this case. The Federal Court of Appeal concluded that the legal character of
the broadcast-incidental copies at issue in this case was settled by that 1990
decision. Bishop, however, rests on jurisprudential foundations that
have been revised by this Court’s subsequent jurisprudence. For a start, Bishop
explicitly adopts a literal approach to the interpretation of s. 3(1) (d)
and the introductory paragraph to s. 3(1) of the Copyright Act : pp.
484-85.
[177]
In the years since Bishop was decided,
this Court has clarified that statutory interpretation cannot be founded on the
wording of the statute alone: Rizzo & Rizzo Shoes Ltd. (Re), [1998]
1 S.C.R. 27, at para. 21. The purposes of the Copyright Act —
including the pre-eminent principle of technological neutrality, and the goal
of maintaining the balance between users and copyright holders — have therefore
taken on enhanced prominence in the interpretive exercise. These purposes lead
us away from approaching the “reproduction right” as capturing every technical
or incidental reproduction, and towards an approach that examines whether it is
the kind of “reproduction” the Act was intended to protect. And that, in
turn, requires examining the purpose and effect of the reproduction — in other
words, its technological context.
[178]
If, on the other hand, we adopt a literal
interpretation of the right enumerated in s. 3(1)(d) of the Act,
there will be no room for the principle of technological neutrality in the
interpretation of rights enumerated in s. 3(1) of the Act. Finding
that the plain meaning of s. 3(1) (d) and the result in Bishop
dictate the scope of the reproduction right in lieu of a purposive and
technologically neutral interpretation will, as a result, roll back nearly two
decades of this Court’s statutory interpretation and copyright jurisprudence.
[179]
Since, in my view, the creation of
broadcast-incidental copies is not a compensable exercise of the reproduction
right, it is not necessary to consider how the Board should value such copies.
That said, I have concerns about how the majority articulates and applies the
principle of technological neutrality to the issue of valuation. The thirteen
years of copyright jurisprudence since Théberge have built up the
principles of balance and technological neutrality floor by floor. With
respect, the majority’s approach builds an entirely new structure which is not
only wholly inconsistent with the established case law, it tears down the
existing foundations. It has a significant and detrimental impact on how the
balance is struck between copyright holders and the users of protected works,
deviates from the principle of technological neutrality articulated in Entertainment
Software Association, and creates uncertainty as to how the principle of
technological neutrality operates.
[180]
First, this Court, in Théberge, concluded
that the Copyright Act is a balance between obtaining a “just reward”
for the creator of protected works, and “promoting the public interest in the
encouragement and dissemination” of such works: para. 30. This balance
considers whether the legitimate interests of copyright holders are implicated
by the proposed use of their protected works. The majority’s application of the
principle of technological neutrality disrupts how this balance is struck. The
majority proposes two novel factors for the Board to consider when striking a
balance between user and copyright holder interests: (1) the nature of the
copyright-protected work’s use in the new technology; and (2) the risks taken
and the extent of the investment made by the user in the new technology. While
the first factor is consistent with the balance articulated in Théberge,
the second is not. Its effect is to tie copyright holder compensation to
actions of the user that are unrelated and irrelevant to the rights held in the
protected works. If we follow the majority’s new factor to its logical
conclusion, we could well find that users who make a sufficiently large investment
or take sufficiently high risks may, by doing so, deprive the copyright holder
of any entitlement to compensation for the use of the protected works.
[181]
Second, the majority’s articulation of the
principle of technological neutrality in this case represents a significant
departure from the principle as it was articulated in Entertainment Software
Association. As the majority acknowledges, the principle of technological
neutrality articulated in Entertainment Software Association seeks to
preserve the accepted balance between creators and users in the digital
environment. In a case like this, where the use of new technology intersects
with the Copyright Act , the principle of technological neutrality calls
for an inquiry into whether there is functional equivalence between the old and
new technology in a way that maintains that balance. The focus is on what
function the technology is performing, not how it is performing it: Entertainment
Software Association, at paras. 5 and 9-10. In other words, as Rothstein J.
himself noted in Rogers v. SOCAN, “[i]f the nature of the activity in
both cases is the same, albeit accomplished through different technical means,
there is no justification for distinguishing between the two for copyright
purposes”: para. 29.
[182]
As this Court confirmed in Entertainment
Software Association, technological neutrality operates to prevent imposing
additional, gratuitous fees on the user simply for the use of more efficient
technologies: para. 9. By focusing the inquiry on the value that the technology
is creating for the user, as the majority does, as opposed to the functional
result created by the technology, it misconstrues technological neutrality. A
technological innovation may create value for the user by increasing
efficiencies, driving down costs, or allowing the user to remain competitive.
But as this Court observed in Entertainment Software Association, a
copyright holder like SODRAC is not entitled to be compensated for how
efficiently a user like the CBC uses technology to achieve its broadcast. Those
gains have nothing to do with the copyright holder’s legitimate interests, or
with the balance struck between the copyright holder and the user.
[183]
The result of the majority’s conclusions is
uncertainty as to the purpose and application of the principle of technological
neutrality in the interpretation and application of the Copyright Act ,
uncertainty as to how users of copyrighted material are to exercise their
authorized rights and activities without incurring additional copyright liability,
and uncertainty as to the “value” of incidental activities. It also represents
the acceptance of layered licensing schemes whereby, rather than licensing the
central activity of broadcasting, licences are granted for the central activity
as well as for its component parts based solely on the method chosen to
effect the central authorized activity. This results in the imposition of
gratuitous costs on broadcasters merely for the use of more efficient
technologies that do not engage with the legitimate interests of copyright
holders. These are the very consequences that this Court’s decision in Entertainment
Software Association said were proscribed by the principle of technological
neutrality.
[184]
In conclusion, applying the standard of
reasonableness and looking at the Board’s reasons as a whole, in my view its
decision to impose royalty fees for broadcast-incidental copies was
unreasonable. It is, as a result, unnecessary to consider the valuation issue.
[185]
Why apply reasonableness? Here we come yet again
to this Court’s prodigal child, the standard of review. Too much obfuscation
has already cluttered the journey, but while I hesitate to add words to an
already overcrowded space, I have concerns that the majority has created yet
another confusing fork in the road.
[186]
The central issue in this appeal is whether the
Copyright Board ought to have imposed royalty fees on the CBC for the creation
of incidental copies that arise as a technical part of the digital broadcasting
process. This question is at the heart of the Copyright Board’s specialized
mandate and therefore reviewable on a reasonableness standard.
[187]
In this case, rather than review the Copyright
Board’s decision as a whole, Rothstein J. identifies no less than five separate
issues, each of which he says attracts its own discrete standard of review
analysis. One of these issues, “whether the Copyright Act allows SODRAC
to seek a licence for CBC’s broadcast-incidental copying”, is said to warrant
correctness review, while the other four are to be reviewed on the reasonableness
standard. Applying these competing standards to the different components of the
Copyright Board’s decision, he ultimately concludes that the Copyright Board
was correct in proceeding on the basis that broadcast-incidental copies engage
the reproduction right under the Copyright Act , but that some of its
conclusions with respect to the other issues were reasonable while others were
not. With respect, this takes judicial review Through the Looking Glass.
[188]
It is true that, in Rogers v. SOCAN, the majority
held that the appropriate standard of review is correctness for questions of
law for which the Copyright Board and courts share concurrent jurisdiction:
para. 15. But in that case, the “sole issue” was “the meaning of the phrase ‘to
the public’ in s. 3(1)(f) of the [Copyright Act ]”: para.
2. After deciding the legal issue, the majority applied that conclusion to the
facts: paras. 53-56. No further standard of review was discussed,
considered or applied. In this case, the Board’s decision was to impose
royalty fees for the creation of broadcast-incidental copies. Rothstein
J. not only extricates as a discrete legal question whether the Copyright
Act allows SODRAC to seek a licence for the CBC’s broadcast-incidental
copying, he subdivides the rest of the decision into separate
compartments entitled to their own standard of review. This is both new and
regressive. It is also an approach that was proscribed by this Court in Council
of Canadians with Disabilities v. VIA Rail Canada Inc., [2007] 1 S.C.R. 650,
at para. 100.
[189]
Extricating the various components of the
decision and subjecting each to its own standard of review analysis represents,
with respect, a significant and inexplicable change in this Court’s standard of
review jurisprudence, further erodes the careful framework this Court endorsed
in Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 190, and risks creating an
unworkable template for the judicial review of administrative decision-making.
[190]
This latest movement in Rothstein J.’s shifting
tectonic reviewing plates — extricating the various aspects of a tribunal’s
decision for their own individual standard of review analysis — creates even
more confusion in an area of jurisprudence already unduly burdened by too many
exceptions in the brief years since this Court decided Dunsmuir. There
are always many parts of a tribunal’s decision. Requiring courts to separately
assess the standard of review for each of these parts and then to decide how
many of those parts must be found to be unreasonable or incorrect in order to
outweigh those parts which are found to be reasonable or correct may lead, with
respect, to absurd results. Reviewing courts will be left to wonder just how
many unreasonable or incorrect components of a decision it takes to warrant
judicial intervention.
[191]
Breaking down a decision into each of its
component parts also increases the risk that a reviewing court will find an
error to justify interfering in the tribunal’s decision, and may well be seen
as a thinly veiled attempt to allow reviewing courts wider discretion to
intervene in administrative decisions. This, at its core, is the
re-introduction of the long since abandoned “preliminary question doctrine”,
whereby courts adopted such a broad and probing understanding of
“jurisdictional error” that they could effectively substitute their own opinion
for that of a tribunal on virtually any aspect of a tribunal’s decision. The
preliminary question doctrine was a judicial tactic to permit courts to
intervene and substitute their own views. It was a tactic Canadian Union of
Public Employees, Local 963 v. New Brunswick Liquor Corp., [1979] 2 S.C.R.
227, sought to end and Dunsmuir sought to bury. Its spiritual heirs
should be given the same treatment.
[192]
I would therefore allow the appeal with costs throughout.
The following are the reasons
delivered by
[193]
Karakatsanis J.
(dissenting) —
I agree with my colleague Justice Abella on the merits and in the result. I
write, however, because I cannot accept her position on the standard of
review. This expert tribunal is presumptively reviewable on the basis of
reasonableness. However, I agree with Justice Rothstein that the legal issue
of whether broadcast-incidental copies engage the reproduction right must be
reviewed on the basis of correctness, in accordance with our decision in Rogers
Communications Inc. v. Society
of Composers, Authors and Music Publishers of Canada, 2012 SCC 35, [2012] 2 S.C.R. 283, at paras. 10-20. As the
presumption has not otherwise been displaced, the standard of review of reasonableness
applies to the balance of the statutory licence decision and the interim
licence decision: Copyright Board file Nos. 70.2-2008-01, 70.2-2008-02,
November 2, 2012 (online), and file No. 70.2-2012-01, January 16, 2013
(online), respectively.
[194]
However, I do not endorse the general approach
my colleague Justice Rothstein has taken to his analysis of the standard of
review. I am concerned with a methodology that examines and ascribes a
specific standard of review to each individual issue challenged within a
tribunal decision. Our jurisprudence permits the isolation of a particular
question of law on an exceptional basis; it does not require a separate
standard of review analysis for each issue. I worry that an issue-by-issue
approach, within each decision, will add to the submissions and analysis
required to establish the standard of review in each case. It unnecessarily
complicates an already overwrought area of the law.
[195]
I would allow the appeal.
APPENDIX
Copyright Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. C-42 (version in effect at the relevant time)
3. (1) For the purposes of this 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, and includes the sole right
. .
.
(d) in the case
of a literary, dramatic or musical work, to make any sound recording,
cinematograph film or other contrivance by means of which the work may be
mechanically reproduced or performed,
. .
.
(f) in the case
of any literary, dramatic, musical or artistic work, to communicate the work to
the public by telecommunication,
. .
.
and to authorize any
such acts.
30.8 (1) It is not an infringement of copyright for a
programming undertaking to fix or reproduce in accordance with this section a
performer’s performance or work, other than a cinematographic work, that is
performed live or a sound recording that is performed at the same time as the
performer’s performance or work, if the undertaking
(a) is
authorized to communicate the performer’s performance, work or sound recording
to the public by telecommunication;
(b) makes
the fixation or the reproduction itself, for its own broadcasts;
(c) does
not synchronize the fixation or reproduction with all or part of another
recording, performer’s performance or work; and
(d) does
not cause the fixation or reproduction to be used in an advertisement intended
to sell or promote, as the case may be, a product, service, cause or
institution.
(2) The
programming undertaking must record the dates of the making and destruction of
all fixations and reproductions and any other prescribed information about the
fixation or reproduction, and keep the record current.
(3) The
programming undertaking must make the record referred to in subsection (2)
available to owners of copyright in the works, sound recordings or performer’s
performances, or their representatives, within twenty-four hours after
receiving a request.
(4) The
programming undertaking must destroy the fixation or reproduction within thirty
days after making it, unless
(a) the
copyright owner authorizes its retention; or
(b) it is
deposited in an archive, in accordance with subsection (6).
(5) Where
the copyright owner authorizes the fixation or reproduction to be retained
after the thirty days, the programming undertaking must pay any applicable
royalty.
(6) Where
the programming undertaking considers a fixation or reproduction to be of an
exceptional documentary character, the undertaking may, with the consent of an
official archive, deposit it in the official archive and must notify the
copyright owner, within thirty days, of the deposit of the fixation or reproduction.
(7) In
subsection (6), “official archive” means the Library and Archives of Canada or
any archive established under the law of a province for the preservation of the
official archives of the province.
(8) This
section does not apply where a licence is available from a collective society
to make the fixation or reproduction of the performer’s performance, work or
sound recording.
(9) A
broadcasting undertaking, as defined in the Broadcasting Act , may make a
single reproduction of a fixation or reproduction made by a programming
undertaking and communicate it to the public by telecommunication, within the
period referred to in subsection (4), if the broadcasting undertaking meets the
conditions set out in subsection (1) and is part of a prescribed network that
includes the programming undertaking.
(10) The
reproduction and communication to the public by telecommunication must be made
(a) in
accordance with subsections (2) to (6); and
(b) within
thirty days after the day on which the programming undertaking made the
fixation or reproduction.
(11) In
this section, “programming undertaking” means
(a) a
programming undertaking as defined in subsection 2(1) of the Broadcasting
Act ;
(b) a
programming undertaking described in paragraph (a) that originates
programs within a network, as defined in subsection 2(1) of the Broadcasting
Act ; or
(c) a
distribution undertaking as defined in subsection 2(1) of the Broadcasting
Act , in respect of the programs that it originates.
The undertaking must
hold a broadcasting licence issued by the Canadian Radio-television and
Telecommunications Commission under the Broadcasting Act .
30.9 (1) It is not an infringement of copyright for a
broadcasting undertaking to reproduce in accordance with this section a sound
recording, or a performer’s performance or work that is embodied in a sound
recording, solely for the purpose of transferring it to a format appropriate
for broadcasting, if the undertaking
(a) owns
the copy of the sound recording, performer’s performance or work and that copy
is authorized by the owner of the copyright;
(b) is
authorized to communicate the sound recording, performer’s performance or work
to the public by telecommunication;
(c) makes
the reproduction itself, for its own broadcasts;
(d) does
not synchronize the reproduction with all or part of another recording,
performer’s performance or work; and
(e) does
not cause the reproduction to be used in an advertisement intended to sell or
promote, as the case may be, a product, service, cause or institution.
(2) The
broadcasting undertaking must record the dates of the making and destruction of
all reproductions and any other prescribed information about the reproduction,
and keep the record current.
(3) The
broadcasting undertaking must make the record referred to in subsection (2)
available to owners of copyright in the sound recordings, performer’s
performances or works, or their representatives, within twenty-four hours after
receiving a request.
(4) The
broadcasting undertaking must destroy the reproduction when it no longer
possesses the sound recording or performer’s performance or work embodied in
the sound recording, or at the latest within thirty days after making the
reproduction, unless the copyright owner authorizes the reproduction to be
retained.
(5) If
the copyright owner authorizes the reproduction to be retained, the
broadcasting undertaking must pay any applicable royalty.
(6) This
section does not apply if a licence is available from a collective society to
reproduce the sound recording, performer’s performance or work.
(7) In
this section, “broadcasting undertaking” means a broadcasting undertaking as
defined in subsection 2(1) of the Broadcasting Act that holds a
broadcasting licence issued by the Canadian Radio-television and
Telecommunications Commission under that Act.
66.51 The Board may, on application, make an interim decision.
66.6 (1) The Board may, with the approval of the Governor in
Council, make regulations governing
(a) the practice
and procedure in respect of the Board’s hearings, including the number of
members of the Board that constitutes a quorum;
70.2 (1) Where a collective society and any person not
otherwise authorized to do an act mentioned in section 3, 15, 18 or 21, as the
case may be, in respect of the works, sound recordings or communication signals
included in the collective society’s repertoire are unable to agree on the
royalties to be paid for the right to do the act or on their related terms and
conditions, either of them or a representative of either may, after giving
notice to the other, apply to the Board to fix the royalties and their related
terms and conditions.
(2) The
Board may fix the royalties and their related terms and conditions in respect
of a licence during such period of not less than one year as the Board may
specify and, as soon as practicable after rendering its decision, the Board
shall send a copy thereof, together with the reasons therefor, to the
collective society and the person concerned or that person’s representative.
Appeal
allowed with costs, Abella
and Karakatsanis JJ.
dissenting.
Solicitors
for the appellant: Fasken Martineau DuMoulin, Montréal.
Solicitors
for the respondents: Matteau Poirier avocats inc., Montréal.
Solicitors
for the interveners the Centre for Intellectual Property Policy and Ariel
Katz: Macera & Jarzyna, Ottawa.
Solicitor
for the intervener the Samuelson‑Glushko Canadian Internet Policy and
Public Interest Clinic: University of Ottawa, Ottawa.
Solicitors
for the interveners the Canadian Musical Reproduction Rights Agency Ltd., the
Canadian Music Publishers Association and the International Confederation of
Music Publishers: Cassels Brock & Blackwell, Toronto.
Solicitors for the
interveners Music Canada, the International Federation of the Phonographic
Industry, the Canadian Council of Music Industry Associations, the Canadian
Independent Music Association and Association québécoise de l’industrie du
disque, du spectacle et de la vidéo: McCarthy Tétrault, Toronto.