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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> The Football Association Premier League Ltd v QC Leisure & Ors [2008] EWHC 44 (Ch) (18 January 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2008/44.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 44 (Ch) |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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The Football Association Premier League Limited |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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QC Leisure & ors |
Defendants |
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Mr Martin Howe QC and Mr Andrew Norris (instructed by Orchard Brayton Graham LLP) for the Defendants in the QC Leisure and Madden actions;Mr Martin Howe QC (instructed by Molesworth Bright Clegg) for the defendants in the AV station PLC action
Hearing dates: Wednesday 19th December 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Barling :
Introduction
i) The Claimant's applications (in all three claims) for summary judgment in respect of that part of the Defendants' defence based on Article 81 of the EC Treaty.
ii) The Claimant's application (as an alternative to (1)) to stay the trial of the Article 81 defence until further order.
iii) Applications by the Defendants in the QC and AV claims for specific disclosure. (There does not appear to be a corresponding application in the Madden claim. This may be because pursuant to the order of Master Moncaster dated the 6 December 2007 disclosure in the QC and AV actions is also to stand as disclosure on the Madden claim).
Summary judgment/stay
Background
"Foreign broadcasters are prohibited from supplying non-UK cards for use in the UK and none of their customers are authorised to view or receive broadcasts from within the UK."
"The Foreign Broadcasters are prohibited from supplying SMART cards for use in the United Kingdom".
"7. Under the terms of the license under which the Foreign Broadcasters received transmissions of the Matches from Premier League Productions each Foreign Broadcaster ("Licensee") is required to undertake that it shall "procure that no device (including but not limited to any "smart card" and any decoding equipment which is necessary to decode or decrypt any such Transmission) shall be knowingly authorised or enabled by or with the authority of the Licensee and/or any Permitted Sub-Licensee and/or any distributor, agent or employee of the Licensee and/or any Permitted Sub-Licensee so as to permit any person to view any such Transmission outside the Territory [which Territory does not include the UK] in an intelligible form." This form of wording is present in the licence agreements... applicable to the "ART" cards and "Nova" smart cards referred to in the statements of case to date. Clauses to this effect are included in all relevant overseas broadcasting agreements"
"17. In so far as the prohibition alleged in the first sentence of paragraph 41 is based upon or the consequence of agreements between undertakings or concerted practices, such prohibition has as its object or effect the prevention, restriction or distortion of competition within the common market. In particular such prohibition purports to limit or control the markets to which broadcasters are permitted to supply their broadcasting services and/or to supply decoder cards, contrary to Article 81 (1) (b) EC.
18. The alleged prohibition is accordingly void and cannot be relied upon as a basis for contending that the Defendants' customers are not entitled to receive the satellite broadcasts concerned. "
"1. The Defendants' case under Article 81 EC relates solely to the prohibition on the Foreign Broadcasters which is pleaded by the Claimant in the first sentence of paragraph 10 of its Particulars of Claim….and as further particularised in Responses 6 and 7 in its Further Information Responses served … on 21 March 2007.
2. The Defendants contend that the agreements as pleaded in Response 7 between the Claimant and its Licensee in each territory… breach Article 81 in so far as they contain or… reflect the term pleaded in Response 7. Alternatively the insertion of such terms into the said agreements to constitute a network of agreements providing territorial protection for each Foreign Broadcaster constitutes a concerted practice to which the Claimant and its Licensees and sub-Licensees are parties.
3. The Defendants contend that steps taken to implement the prohibition such as steps taken by Foreign Broadcasters to prevent the circulation or use of decoder cards outside their respective territories or steps taken by the Claimant to induce the Foreign Broadcasters to take such steps, are the unlawful consequences of the above pleaded breach of Article 81 EC. "
Summary Judgment
"24.2 The court may give summary judgment against a ….defendant on the whole of a claim or on a particular issue if-
(a) it considers that -
i) ….
ii) that defendant has no real prospect of successfully defending the claim or issue; and
(b) there is no other compelling reason why the case or issue should be disposed of at a trial.
…."
"From these sources I derive the following elementary propositions:
(a) It is for the applicant for summary judgment to demonstrate that the respondent has no real prospect of success in his claim or defence as the case may be;
(b) a "real" prospect of success is one which is more than fanciful or merely arguable;
(c) if it is clear beyond question that the respondent will not be able at trial to establish the facts on which he relies then his prospects of success are not real; but
(d) the court is not entitled on an application for summary judgment to conduct a trial on documents without disclosure or cross-examination."
(1) that that judgment makes it clear that exclusive territorial licences of copyright in broadcasts do not offend Article 81 by reason of their territorial exclusivity; and
(2) that the licence arrangements between the Claimant and foreign broadcasters are akin to the licence which was the subject of that judgment.
"The provisions of the Treaty relating to the freedom to provide services do not preclude an assignee of the performing right in a cinematographic film in a Member State from relying upon his right to prohibit the exhibition of that film in that State, without his authority, by means of cable diffusion, if the film so exhibited is picked up and transmitted after being broadcast in another Member State by a third party with the consent of the original owner of the right"
"The effect of this is that, whilst copyright entails the right to demand fees for any showing or performance, the rules of the Treaty cannot in principle constitute an obstacle to the geographical limits which the parties to a contract of assignment have agreed upon in order to protect the author and his assigns in this regard. The mere fact that those geographical limits may coincide with national frontiers does not point to a different solution in a situation where television is organised in the Member State largely on the basis of legal broadcasting monopolies, which indicates that a limitation other than the geographical field of application of an assignment is often impracticable. "
"9. The question essentially seeks to ascertain the position, in relation to prohibitions contained in Article [81] of the Treaty, of a contract whereby the owner of a copyright in a film grants the exclusive right to exhibit that film within the territory of a Member State and for a specified period. …....
15.…the mere fact that the owner of a copyright in a film has granted to a sole licensee the exclusive right to exhibit that film in the territory of a Member State and, consequently, to prohibit, during a specified period, its showing by others, is not sufficient to justify the finding that such a contract must be regarded as the purpose, the means or the result of an agreement, decision or concerted practice prohibited by the Treaty.
16. The characteristics of the cinematographic industry and of its market in the Community, especially those relating to dubbing and subtitling for the benefit of different language groups, to the possibilities of television broadcast, and to the system of financing cinematographic production in Europe serve to show that an exclusive exhibition license is not, in itself, such as to prevent, restrict or distort competition.
17. Although copyright in a film and the right deriving from it, namely that of exhibiting the film, are not, therefore, as such subject to the prohibition contained in Article [81], the exercise of those rights may, none the less, come within the said prohibitions where there are economic or legal circumstances the effect of which is to restrict film distribution to an appreciable degree or to distort competition, on the cinematographic market, regard being had to the specific characteristics of that market. "
"In the Coditel II decision, the ECJ held that exclusive licences of performing rights did not per se infringe Article 85 (1), even though they conferred absolute territorial protection and might prevent transmission into a neighbouring State."
"The object of the Directive with the definition of the notion of communication to the public by satellite at Community level was to put an end to the legal uncertainty regarding the rights to be acquired, by specifying the place where the act of communication occurs and the copyright legislation applicable to contractual relations regarding the transfer of rights.The applicable law is that of the Member State in which the programme-carrying signals are transmitted; its application extends beyond national borders into the Member States in which the signals are received … This principle avoids the cumulative application of several national legislations of the various Member States covered by the footprint…."
"Without prejudice to paragraph 1 Member States may not:
(a) restrict the provision of protected services, or associated services, which originated in another Member State or
(b) restrict the freedom of movement of conditional access devices;
for reasons falling within the field coordinated by this Directive"
Alternative Application for a Stay
i) Whether the bringing of the patent infringement actions represented an unlawful attempt by the patent holder to compel the defendant to enter into an agreement which would be contrary to Article 81 and/or was abuse of a dominant position under Article 82.
ii) Whether the refusal to grant the defendant a patent licence on lawful or reasonable terms was an abuse of a dominant position contrary to Article 82.
"The issues in relation to Articles 81 and 82 only arise if the patents in suit are both valid and infringed. At this stage it is impossible to say whether any and if so which claims in any of them is both valid and infringed. Until it has been determined that at least one of them is, the issues relating to Articles 81 and 82 are hypothetical. Moreover unless and until it has been determined which claims in the patents in suit are valid the extent to which any of the patents in suit is capable of restricting competition and therefore capable of giving rise to infringements of Articles 81 and 82 is uncertain. "