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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Twentieth Century Fox Film Corp & Ors v Harris & Ors [2013] EWHC 159 (Ch) (05 February 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2013/159.html Cite as: [2014] 1 Ch 41, [2013] WLR(D) 42, [2014] Ch 41, [2014] FSR 7, [2013] EMLR 16, [2013] EWHC 159 (Ch), [2013] 2 WLR 1454, [2014] CH 41, [2014] 1 CH 41 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
7 Rolls Buildings, Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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(1) TWENTIETH CENTURY FOX FILM CORPORATION (2) UNIVERSAL CITY STUDIOS LLC (3) WARNER BROS. ENTERTAINMENT INC. (4) PARAMOUNT PICTURES CORPORATION (5) DISNEY ENTERPRISES, INC. (61) COLUMBIA PICTURES INDUSTRIES, INC. (the members of the Motion Picture Association of America Inc., on their own behalf and on behalf of all the other companies that are controlled by, controlling of or under common control with such members (together "the Group Companies") that are the owners, or exclusive licensees, of the copyright in films and television programmes) |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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(1) DAVID HARRIS (2) KTHXBAI LIMITED (3) THE NZB FOUNDATION (5) CHRISTOPHER ELSWORTH (6) MOTORS FOR MOVIES LIMITED |
Defendants |
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Miss Jane Lambert (instructed by JWK Solicitors) for the First and Second Defendants
Hearing dates: 20 December 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Newey :
Background
"the Newzbin2 website is the same as the Newzbin website; its purpose is the same; and the use to which it is put by its members is the same".
"The courts have always recognised a clear distinction between the ordinary Mareva jurisdiction and proprietary claims. The ordinary Mareva injunction restricts a defendant from dealing with his own assets. An injunction of the present kind, at least in part, restrains the defendants from dealing with assets to which the plaintiff asserts title. It is not designed merely to preserve the defendant's assets so as to be available to meet a judgment; it is designed to protect the plaintiff from having its property expended for the defendant's purposes".
The parties' cases in summary
Discussion
"[I]t has to be borne in mind that counterfeiting of video films is a serious offence. In effect to make and distribute pirate copies of films is to steal from the true owner of the copyright, the property for which he has to expend money in order to possess it. It is an offence really of dishonesty".
Building on the analogy, Mr Spearman invoked Westdeutsche Landesbank Girozentrale v Islington LBC [1996] AC 669, dicta in which indicate that a constructive trust can arise in relation to stolen property. At 715-716, Lord Browne-Wilkinson said:
"The argument for a resulting trust was said to be supported by the case of a thief who steals a bag of coins. At law those coins remain traceable only so long as they are kept separate: as soon as they are mixed with other coins or paid into a mixed bank account they cease to be traceable at law. Can it really be the case, it is asked, that in such circumstances the thief cannot be required to disgorge the property which, in equity, represents the stolen coins? Moneys can only be traced in equity if there has been at some stage a breach of fiduciary duty, i.e. if either before the theft there was an equitable proprietary interest (e.g. the coins were stolen trust moneys) or such interest arises under a resulting trust at the time of the theft or the mixing of the moneys. Therefore, it is said, a resulting trust must arise either at the time of the theft or when the moneys are subsequently mixed. Unless this is the law, there will be no right to recover the assets representing the stolen moneys once the moneys have become mixed.
I agree that the stolen moneys are traceable in equity. But the proprietary interest which equity is enforcing in such circumstances arises under a constructive, not a resulting, trust. Although it is difficult to find clear authority for the proposition, when property is obtained by fraud equity imposes a constructive trust on the fraudulent recipient: the property is recoverable and traceable in equity. Thus, an infant who has obtained property by fraud is bound in equity to restore it: Stocks v. Wilson [1913] 2 KB 235, 244; R. Leslie Ltd. v. Sheill [1914] 3 KB 607. Moneys stolen from a bank account can be traced in equity: Bankers Trust Co. v. Shapira [1980] 1 W.L.R. 1274, 1282C-E: see also McCormick v. Grogan (1869) L.R. 4 H.L. 82, 97".
"S.18 of the 1956 Act created a statutory fiction that infringing copies of copyright works were deemed to belong to the copyright owner. This gave rise to the remedy of conversion damages i.e. damages based on the whole value of the infringing article. It was a provision that often caused surprise even to lawyers and judges other than those who specialised in intellectual property law, let alone to lay people. By the time of Columbia v Robinson it had been widely criticised, and was generally recognised as being anomalous and ripe for repeal. It was duly repealed not long afterwards by the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988".
It was thus thought unacceptable for a copyright owner to be entitled to the whole value of an infringing item. Yet that is what the result would be if copyright owners had the proprietary claims for which the Studios contend.
"I had supposed that the claim against 'The Sunday Times' for an account would be based on the proposition that in equity the Crown should be treated as the owner of the copyright. Prima facie, this approach would seem to have some merit. If Mr. Wright in writing the book was acting in breach of a continuing duty of confidence and fidelity that he owed to the Crown, there would, in my view, be a strong argument for regarding the product of the breach of duty as belonging in equity to the Crown. If that were so, and on the footing that 'The Sunday Times' could not claim to be a bona fide purchaser without notice of the Crown's equity, it would follow that 'The Sunday Times' would be accountable to the Crown for any profit it made in serialising Spycatcher. It would also follow that the Crown would, in this jurisdiction at least, be entitled to prevent further publication of the book by anyone who could be shown to be on notice of the Crown's equity. The Crown would be entitled to do so on straightforward proprietary grounds. The equitable owner of copyright in a book can choose to suppress the book and forego any profit therefrom if he chooses".
The Crown, however, disavowed any claim to be entitled in equity to the copyright in the book (see 140).
"It has seemed to me throughout the hearing of this appeal that there could have been strong arguments for saying that, as Mr. Wright wrote and published Spycatcher in breach of his duty of secrecy to the Crown and was only able to do so by the misuse of secret information which had come to him in the course of his employment as an officer in the Security Service of the Crown, the copyright in Spycatcher belongs in equity to the Crown and is held on a constructive trust for the Crown with whatever consequences may follow from that. Since, however, the Crown has in the most explicit terms disclaimed any reliance on equitable copyright, I put such thoughts out of mind".
"There remains of course, the question whether the Crown might successfully maintain a claim that it is in equity the owner of the copyright in the book. Such a claim has not yet been advanced, but might well succeed if it were to be".
In similar vein, Lord Griffiths said (at 276):
"as at present advised I accept the view of Scott J. and Dillon L.J. that the copyright in Spycatcher is probably vested in the Crown".
Lord Goff of Chieveley said (at 288):
"Indeed, there is some ground for saying that the true answer is that the copyright in the book, including the film rights, are held by him on constructive trust for the confider - so that the remedy lies not in breach of confidence, but in restitution or in property, whichever way you care to look at it: see, in this connection, ante, pp. 210D - 211C, per Dillon L.J.
At all events, since the point was not argued before us, I wish to reserve the question whether, in a case such as the present, some limited obligation (analogous to the springboard doctrine) may continue to rest upon a confidant who, in breach of confidence, destroys the confidential nature of the information entrusted to him".
"In the event, therefore, the second question, namely whether the Crown can claim, as remedies for the defendant's breach of duty in writing and authorising publication of his book, to be entitled in equity to the copyright in the book and to an account of the defendant's profits from the book, does not arise. Since, however, the issue has been the subject of careful and detailed submissions, I will state, in summary terms, my conclusions on the question. If the defendant had owed the Crown the duties contended for, the writing and publication of the book would have constituted a breach of those duties. If the point had been free from authority, I would have held that the defendant, as wrongdoer, ought in equity to be required to hold the fruits of his wrongdoing for the person to whom the duty was owed, namely the Crown. That was the view I expressed in the Spycatcher case [1990] 1 AC 109, 139. The same view was expressed by Dillon L.J. in the Court of Appeal, p. 211, and, tentatively, by Lord Keith, p. 263, and, more firmly, by Lord Griffiths, p. 276, in the House of Lords. As, however, the Crown did not desire to take the point, the point was not the subject of any argument. As at present advised I believe the point to be precluded by authority in the form of Lister & Co. v. Stubbs (1890) 45 ChD 1 and Halifax Building Society v. Thomas [1996] Ch 217, both Court of Appeal decisions by which I am bound. The Privy Council in Attorney-General for Hong Kong v. Reid [1994] 1 AC 324, an appeal from the Court of Appeal of New Zealand, disapproved Lister & Co. v. Stubbs. But that disapproval does not relieve me from the obligation in this jurisdiction of accepting its authority. I am, if I may respectfully say so, persuaded by the reasoning of Lord Templeman in his judgment in Reid's case that Lister & Co. v. Stubbs ought no longer to be regarded as good law. That reasoning, applied to the present case on the footing that the defendant's writing of and authority for the publication of the book were breaches of his continuing duties to the Crown, would justify, in my judgment, the conclusion that the Crown was entitled in equity to the benefit of the copyright in the book and to the profits derived by the defendant therefrom".
"A cinematograph film may have been made, as in Lincoln Hunt [Australia Pty Ltd v Willesee (1986) 4 NSWLR 457], in circumstances involving the invasion of the legal or equitable rights of the plaintiff or a breach of the obligations of the maker to the plaintiff. It may then be inequitable and against good conscience for the maker to assert ownership of the copyright against the plaintiff and to broadcast the film. The maker may be regarded as a constructive trustee of an item of personal (albeit intangible) property, namely the copyright conferred by s 98 of the Copyright Act. In such circumstances, the plaintiff may obtain a declaration as to the subsistence of the trust and a mandatory order requiring an assignment by the defendant of the legal (ie statutory) title to the intellectual property rights in question."
Callinan J agreed with Gummow and Hayne JJ on the point, although he noted that the relevant copyright legislation would apply "somewhat uneasily" (see paragraph 309).
i) The point under consideration (viz. whether copyright in a film made unlawfully was subject to a trust) was rather different to that with which I am concerned (viz. whether a copyright owner has a proprietary claim to the fruits of infringement); and
ii) The Australian approach to constructive trusts is by no means the same as that in this jurisdiction. In particular, as the Full Court of the Federal Court of Australia noted in Grimaldi v Chameleon Mining NL (No. 2) [2012] FCAFC 6 (in paragraph 574):
"unlike Australian law, [English law] does not recognise that the constructive trust can be a discretionary remedy: see Sinclair Investments, at [37]; contrast Bathurst City Council v PWC Properties Pty Ltd [[1998] HCA 59; (1998) 195 CLR 566] at [42]".
Conclusion