T-1232-84
T-1235-84
Apple Computer, Inc. and Apple Canada Inc.
(Plaintiffs)
v.
Mackintosh Computers Ltd., Compagnie d'Élec-
tronique Repco Ltée/Repco Electronics Co. Ltd.,
Maison des Semiconducteurs Ltée/House of
Semiconductors Ltd., Chico Levy, Joseph Levy,
Nat Levy, Micro Computer Syncotech Systems
Ltd., Roman Melnyk, Gary Grecco, Richard
Wichlacz, Robert Pelland carrying on business
under the firm name and style of Centre du
Hobbie Enr., Éric -Pierre Durez and Serge Pelle-
tier carrying on business under the firm name and
style of Pro-Micro Enr., Claude Denise Bérubé
Villeneuve carrying on business under the firm
name and style of Villeneuve Électronique Enr.,
Daniel Renaud carrying on business under the
firm name and style of Microbit Enr., Hastings
Leasing (Belleville) Limited, William George
Knight, Evelyn Gwendelyn Knight, Glen Martin
Sargent, Mohamed Nath000 Gulamhusein carry
ing on business under the firm name and style of
Compu-Sys, Tempo Audivision Incorporated,
Leslie David Graham Newton, Unitron Computer
Corporation, Robert A. Hubbell, Ace Computer
Supplies Inc., George Yin Kit Poon, Simon Yin
On Poon, Mang Chi Ly, Nu Mini Yung, Sabtronic
Systems Ltd., Bernard Allan Sabiston and Made-
leine Irene Sabiston (Defendants)
and
Apple Computer, Inc. and Apple Canada Inc.
(Plaintiffs)
v.
115778 Canada Inc., carrying on business under
the firm name and style of Microcom and James
Begg and 131375 Canada Inc. (Defendants)
INDEXED AS: APPLE COMPUTER INC V. MACKINTOSH COM
PUTERS LTD.
Trial Division, Reed J.—Toronto, January 21, 22,
23, 24, 28, 29, 31, February 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 10;
Ottawa, April 29, 1986.
Copyright — Computer programs embodied in silicon chips
subject-matter of copyright — Under s. 3 of Act, copyright
"sole right to produce or reproduce work in any material form
whatever" — S. 3 broad enough to encompass new technolo
gies — Hexadecimal form of source code program translation
of original work, not different literary work — "In any
material form whatever" covering plaintiffs' program as
embodied in ROM chip — Argument plaintiffs' program
exhibiting merger of idea and expression and therefore not
copyrightable unconvincing — Fact programs written in vari
ous forms, media chosen for embodiment irrelevant and
impossibility for programmer to write same program twice
ruling out merger argument — Policy considerations rejected
— Personal liability of defendants — Knowledge "notice of
facts leading reasonable person to think breach committed"
— Knowledge alone insufficient to establish liability for copy
right infringement — Necessary to prove defendants author
ized commission of infringing act within meaning of s. 3 or
involved in s. 17(4) prohibited activities — Delivery up and
accounting of profits ordered — Copyright Act, R.S.C. 1970,
c. C-30, ss. 2, 3, 4(3), 17(1),(4), 25, 45, 46 — Copyright Act,
R.S.0 1952, c. 55, s. 2(v) — An Act to amend the Law of
Copyright, 5 & 6 Vict., c. 45 (U.K.) — Copyright Act, 1911, 1
& 2 Geo. 5, c. 46, ss. 1(2)(a),(d), 19(1) (U.K.) — Industrial
Design Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. I-8 — Patent Act, R.S.C. 1970, c.
P-4, s. 28(3).
For the facts of the case, reference should be made to the
Editor's Note infra.
Held, an order should issue requiring delivery up of the
devices containing the program, all copies of the program and
all devices containing copies, as well as an accounting of profits
made by the defendants as a result of the sale of computers and
components which infringe the copyrights of Apple Computer.
The defendants' argument, that there is no copyright protec
tion given to the hexadecimal form of the source code program
because it is not a "translation" of that work but a different
literary work, could not be accepted. The conversion from one
code to another clearly falls within the definition of "transla-
tion" set out in The Concise Oxford Dictionary: to "express
the sense ... in or into another form of representation". The
media chosen for embodiment of the program retains the
character of the original work. The hexadecimal form of the
program is not a different literary work, but a translation of the
original.
The argument, that since there would be only one way of
structuring the ROM (read only memory) chip to enable it to
replicate the program, the latter exhibited a merger of the idea
and the expression thereof which could not be covered by
copyright law, was unconvincing. The Cuisenaire, Hollinrake
and Moreau decisions do not stand for the proposition, urged
by the defendants, that when there exists a merger, the work is
uncopyrightable. The exact scope of that rule, if it even exists,
was not clear. Several works, clearly copyrightable, such as
poems, plays and paintings, exhibit such a merger. The word
"idea" itself is of varying definition. It is only if the idea
communicated by the word is described in highly abstract
terms that one could say there is no merger. In an 1879
decision, the United States Supreme Court held that where a
useful art could only be employed by using the forms or
diagrams by which it was explained, there could be no copy
right in such forms and diagrams. That decision, which has
been criticized as wrongly decided, has not been adopted in
Canada. Indeed, the Federal Court of Appeal appears to have
implicitly rejected it.
The fact that a program can be written in a variety of
different forms, that the same programmer would not write a
program the same way twice, that the medium in which the
program is embodied is irrelevant, all indicate that computer
programs do not fall within the merger exception (if such
exists).
The question whether the opening words of section 3—
" `copyright' means the sole right to produce or reproduce the
work or any substantial part thereof in any material form
whatever"—encompass the embodiment of the plaintiffs' pro
gram in the ROM chip is to be answered in the affirmative.
The plaintiffs' submission, that section 3 was purposely drafted
broadly enough to encompass new technologies, was well taken.
On a physical level, there was no difference between a device
such as a record which "contains" a musical work by virtue of
the grooves impressed therein, and a ROM chip which "con-
tains" a program by virtue of the pattern of conductive and
non-conductive areas created therein. As to the element of
"readability" or "appearance to the eye" discussed in the case
law, it requires no more than that there be a method by which
the work in which copyright is claimed and the work which is
alleged to infringe can be visually compared for the purpose of
determining whether copying has occurred. Since the program
can be "read" out of ROM and so compared, the requirement
is met.
The defendants argue that for copyright to exist, the primary
purpose for which the reproduction is made must be to com
municate the work to human beings. This requirement is
allegedly found in the wording of the relevant legislative provi
sions which must be interpreted by reference to the particular
examples which follow in each case. That argument was con
clusively answered by the words of section 3, "in any material
form whatever". Those words clearly cover the program as
embodied in the ROM chip. To find otherwise would require
reading into section 3 words which are not there.
There was merit in the argument that the ROM chip,
whatever the interpretation of the opening words of section 3,
can be said to fall within paragraph 3(1)(d) as a contrivance by
means of which the work may be delivered. The program can
be delivered to the screen of the monitor or as a print-out to be
read by human beings.
The policy arguments advanced by the defendants against
copyright protection, such as potential restrictions on com
merce and a possible overlap with patent law, could not be
accepted. Proposals for the revision of the Act, referred to by
the defendants, were irrelevant. The Court had to apply the law
as it exists.
On the evidence, it could not be concluded that the defen
dants did not have knowledge of the copying activity being
carried on. The determination of knowledge is a question of
inference from the facts in a given case. The defendants had
more than merely notice of facts which would lead a reasonable
person to think that a breach of copyright law was being
committed. Knowledge alone, however, is not enough to give
rise to liability for copyright infringement. The defendants
must be engaged in activities which bring them within section 3
as having authorized the reproduction of the work or within
subsection 17(4) which sets out specific prohibited activities.
"Authorize" has been defined as meaning "sanction, approve,
and countenance". Furthermore, the inactivity or indifference
to the risk of infringement may be of such a degree that
authorization may be inferred.
By purchasing newspaper ads, the defendants "offered for
sale by way of trade" the infringing articles (a proscribed
activity within the meaning of paragraph 17(4)(a)). The
involvement in trade shows and in retail outlets constituted
"exhibiting in public by way of trade" the said articles (para-
graphs 17(4)(a) and (c)).
The action was dismissed as against Joseph Levy, one of the
individual defendants. To guarantee credits for the importation
of the infringing articles, with the knowledge that such an
activity was being carried on, did not fall within subsection
17(4) or section 3 as authorizing the production or reproduc
tion of the plaintiffs' program.
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
APPLIED:
Thrustcode Ltd. v. W.W. Computing Ltd., [1983] F.S.R.
502 (Ch.D.); Apple Computer Inc y Computer Edge Pty
Ltd (1984), 53 ALR 225 (F.C.); reversing (1983), 50
ALR 581 (F.C.).
DISTINGUISHED:
Cuisenaire, Georges v. South West Imports Ltd., [1968]
1 Ex.C.R. 493; (1-967), 37 Fox Pat. C. 93; affirmed
[1969] S.C.R. 208; (1968), 40 Fox Pat. C. 81; Cuisenaire
v. Reed, [1963] V.R. 719 (S.C.); Schlumberger Canada
Ltd. v. Commissioner of Patents, [1982] 1 F.C. 845;
(1981), 56 C.P.R. (2d) 204 (C.A.), application for leave
to appeal to Supreme Court of Canada dismissed (1981),
63 C.P.R. (2d) 261.
CONSIDERED:
Hollinrake v. Truswell, [1894] 3 Ch. 420 (C.A.);
Moreau, Alfred v. St-Vincent, Roland, [1950] Ex.C.R.
198; Baker v. Selden, 101 U.S. 99 (1879); Bulman Group
Ltd. (The) v. Alpha One-Write Systems B.C. Ltd. et al.
(1981), 54 C.P.R. (2d) 179 (F.C.A.); Bulman Group Ltd.
(The) v. "One Write" Accounting Systems Ltd., [1982] 2
F.C. 327; 62 C.P.R. (2d) 149 (T.D.); Boosey v. Whight,
[1899] 1 Ch. 836; affirmed [1900] 1 Ch. 122 (C.A.);
Sega Enterprises Limited v. Richards and Another,
[1983] F.S.R. 73 (Ch.D.); Mentmore Manufacturing
Co., Ltd. et al. v. National Merchandise Manufacturing
Co. Inc. et al. (1978), 40 C.P.R. (2d) 164 (F.C.A.);
C.B.S. Inc. v. Ames Records & Tapes Ltd., [1981] 2
W.L.R. 973 (Ch.D); Compo Company Ltd. v. Blue Crest
Music Inc. et al., [1980] 1 S.C.R. 357; (1979), 45 C.P.R.
(2d) 1.
REFERRED TO:
Newmark v. National Phonograph Company and Edison
Manufacturing Company (1907), 23 T.L.R. 439 (K.B.);
Monckton v. Gramophone Company Limited (1912), 106
L.T. 84 (C.A.); White-Smith Music Publishing Com
pany v. Apollo Company, 209 U.S. 1 (1908); Apple
Computer, Inc. v. Formula Intern., Inc., 562 F.Supp. 775
(U.S. Dist. Ct. 1983); Falcon v. Famous Players Film
Co., [1926] 2 K.B. 474 (C.A.); Chabot v. Davies, [1936]
3 All E.R. 221 (Ch.D); King Features Syndicate, Incor
porated v. Kleeman (O. & M.) Ld., [1941] A.C. 417
(H.L.); Dorling v. Honnor and Another, [1964] R.P.C.
160 (C.A.); Bayliner Marine Corp. v. Doral Boats Ltd.,
[1986] 3 F.C. 346; (1985), 5 C.P.R. (3d) 289 (T.D.);
Canusa Records Inc. et al. v. Blue Crest Music, Inc. et
al. (1976), 30 C.P.R. (2d) 11 (F.C.A.); R. v. Budget Car
Rentals (Toronto) Ltd. (1981), 31 O.R. (2d) 161 (C.A.);
R. v. Philips Electronics Ltd.—Philips Electronique
Ltee (1980), 30 O.R. (2d) 129 (C.A.); Tuck v. Priester
(1887), 19 Q.B.D. 629; Dalton v. Canadian Human
Rights Commission, [1986] 2 F.C. 141; 63 N.R. 383
(C.A.); Re Application Number 961,392 (1971), 5
C.P.R. (2d) 162 (Pat. App. Bd.); Gottschalk, Comr.
Pats. v. Benson, 175 USPQ 673 (S.C. 1972); Dann,
Comr. Pats. v. Johnston, 189 USPQ 257 (S.C. 1976); Re
Bendix Corporation Application (Now Patent No.
1,176,734) (1984), 5 C.P.R. (3d) 198 (Pat. App. Bd.); Re
Application for Patent of Dissly Research Corp. (Now
Patent No. 1,188,811) (1984), 6 C.P.R. (3d) 420 (Pat.
App. Bd.); Diamond, Comr. Pats. v. Diehr and Lutton,
209 USPQ 1 (S.C. 1981); Northern Office Microcom
puters (Pty) Ltd. v. Rosenstein, [ 1982] F.S.R. 124 (S.C.
S. Afr.); Apple Computer Inc. v. Computermat Inc.
(1983), 1 C.I.P.R. 1 (Ont. H.C.); Apple Computer, Inc.
v. Minitronics of Canada Ltd. et al. (1985), 7 C.P.R.
(3d) 104 (F.C.T.D.); affirmed (1985), 8 C.P.R. (3d) 431
(F.C.A.); Société (La) d'Informatique R.D.G. Inc. v.
Dynabec Ltée et al. (1984), 6 C.P.R. (3d) 299 (Que.
S.C.); affirmed (1985), 6 C.P.R. (3d) 322 (Que. CA.); F
& I Retail Systems Ltd. v. Thermo Guard Automotive
Products Canada Ltd. et al., Supreme Court of Ontario,
June 26, 1984, not reported; Logo Computer Systems
Inc. c. 115778 Canada Inc. et al., Quebec Superior Court,
October 25, 1983, not reported; Nintendo of America,
Inc. v. Coinex Video Games Inc., [1983] 2 F.C. 189
(C.A.); Spacefile Ltd. v. Smart Computing Systems Ltd.
et al. (1983), 75 C.P.R. (2d) 281 (Ont. H.C.); Interna
tional Business Machines Corporation v. Ordinateurs
Spirales Inc., [1985] 1 F.C. 190; (1984), 80 C.P.R. (2d)
187 (T.D.); Salomon v. Salomon & Co., [1897] A.C. 22
(H.L.); Visa International Service Association v. Visa
Motel Corporation, carrying on business as Visa Leasing
et al. (1984), 1 C.P.R. (3d) 109 (B.C.C.A.); RCA Cor-
poration y Custom Cleared Sales Ply Ltd (1978), 19
ALR 123 (N.S.W.C.A.); Albert v. S. Hoffnung & Co.
Ltd. (1921), 22 S.R. 75 (N.S.W.S.C.); Clarke, Irwin &
Co. Ltd. v. C. Cole & Co. Ltd. (1960), 33 C.P.R. 173
(Ont. H.C.); Simon & Schuster Inc. et al. v. Coles Book
Stores Ltd. (1975), 9 O.R. (2d) 718 (H.C.); Proctor &
Gamble Co. v. Bristol-Myers Canada Ltd. (1978), 39
C.P.R. (2d) 145 (F.C.T.D.).
COUNSEL:
Alfred S. Schorr, Ivor M. Hughes and J. I.
Etigson for plaintiffs.
Robert H. C. MacFarlane for defendants.
SOLICITORS:
Alfred S. Schorr, Toronto, and Ivor M.
Hughes, Concord, Ontario, for plaintiffs.
Fitzsimmons, MacFarlane, Toronto, for
defendants.
EDITOR'S NOTE
The Executive Editor has chosen to report the
73 page reasons for judgment herein in an
abridged format. The following portions have
been omitted: a 20 page review of the evidence
explaining the creation of computer programs,
computer languages, the internal memory of the
computer, the computer's integrated electrical cir
cuitry, the operation of a computer from a pro
grammer's point of view, the computer as an
electrical machine and retrieving a program from
ROM (read only memory). Also omitted are the
aspects not in issue (copyright in source code,
substantial copying and ownership) and certain
portions of a review of the evidence headed
"Individual Defendants", "Microcom Action—Evi-
dence re: Defendants' Activities" and "Mackin-
tosh Action—Evidence re: Defendants' Activi
ties". Summaries of the omitted portions have
been prepared.
The narrow but important issue for determina
tion was as to whether a computer program
embodied in a silicon chip in a computer is a
subject matter in which copyright exists.
The plaintiffs hold copyright in two computer
programs: Autostart ROM and Applesoft. Created
for use in the Apple 11 + computer, they were to
serve as its operating instructions. There was
expert evidence that creation of a computer pro
gram requires great ingenuity and that it would
take months of work to write a program such as
those in issue in this case. Computer programs
were highly individualistic and it was practically
impossible that two programmers would, without
copying, create identical programs.
Yet in the defendants' Microcom chips, 12,261
out of 12,288 bytes were identical to the corre
sponding Apple 11 + chips. For the defendants'
Mackintosh chips, the figures were 12,277 out of
12,288.
The plaintiffs' evidence—given mostly by soft
ware experts—dealt with the operation of a com
puter from a programmer's point of view. The
defendants' evidence focussed on the operation
of a computer from a hardware point of view—the
functioning of the machine as a complex system
of integrated electrical circuits. Defence counsel
saw a program as nothing more than specifica
tions for a machine part. That characterization
could not be accepted. In writing a program, a
programmer was not providing specifications for
the manufacture of a ROM chip. He was rather
thinking of instructions to the computer in terms of
moving information between certain registers and
of performing certain operations thereon. Pro
grams were designed as communications to com
puters and used to cause the computer to per
form functions such as calculating and retrieving
information from data banks. Ordinary conceptual
notions of the nature of a written text were
stretched in conceiving of it operating in this
fashion. This uniqueness was the essence of the
dispute as to whether copyright existed.
Without copying the Autostart ROM and
Applesoft programs, it would be very difficult to
create another computer system which could run
the software (application programs) designed for
use with the Apple II +. That was the economic
factor which gave rise to this litigation.
The defendants did not question that the writ
ten assembly language code versions of the pro
grams fell under the protection of the Copyright
Act. The programs were not, however, copied in
their written form but directly from the chips.
Nor did the defendants deny that if copying the
ROM chips is a copying of the assembly code
program, there has been a substantial copying.
Finally, the defendants abandoned any contes-
tation of ownership by plaintiffs of copyright.
The following are the reasons for judgment
rendered in English by
REED J.:
The Issue
The issue is whether a computer program which
originates as a written text, in the normal and
usual sense of those terms, but which has a dimen
sion which it is not traditional to associate with
such texts, continues to be covered by copyright
when it is converted into its electrical code version,
or more precisely in this case when it is embodied
in a device designed to replicate that code.
The defendants' argument that copyright pro
tection does not so extend, has several facets: (1)
the hexidecimal code version of the program is not
a translation of the source code version; (2) since
there is a one to one relationship between the
source code program and its embodiment in the
chip there is a merger of the idea and the expres
sion of the idea which copyright law does not
cover; (3) the text of the Copyright Act [R.S.C.
1970, c. C-30] does not cover computer programs
in their chip form; (4) there are compelling policy
arguments for refusing to extend copyright protec
tion in the present case such as potential restric-
tions on commerce and a possible overlap with
patent law.
Hexadecimal Code — A Translation?
The defendants' position is that there is no
copyright protection given to the hexadecimal
form of the source code program because it is not a
translation of that work but a different literary
work. The conversion from assembly code to hex
adecimal code, indeed from any computer lan
guage (code) to any other, is called a "translation"
by computer programmers. I agree that this is not
a relevant factor. The question is whether or not
the hexadecimal code version is a translation of the
original assembly code version, in terms of the
Copyright Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. C-30. If so, then
the right to produce any such translation belongs
exclusively to the holder of copyright in the origi
nal work:
3. (1) For the purposes of this Act, "copyright" ... includes
the sole right
(a) to produce, reproduce, perform or publish any translation
of the work; [Underlining added.]
The argument, as I understand it, is that while
the assembly language source code version can be
characterized as a set of instructions to the CPU
[central processing unit] (a series of mnemonics or
operations that describe what the CPU should do),
the hexadecimal form of the program is a descrip
tion of the ROM [read only memory] chip. Coun
sel argues that these may very well be two descrip
tions of the same thing but as such they are two
different literary works.
I do not find this argument convincing. In the
first place I note that "translation" in The Concise
Oxford Dictionary (6th ed., 1976) is defined as:
Express the sense of (word, sentence, speech, book, poem, ...)
in or into another language; in or to another form of represen
tation .... [Underlining added.]
The conversion from one code to another clearly
falls within that definition.
An analogy can be drawn to the conversion of a
text into morse code. If a person were to sit down
and convert a text into the series of dots and
dashes of which morse code is comprised, one
might argue that the resultant notations were
really instructions to the telegraph operator on
how to send the message. But the message written
in morse code, in my view, still retains the charac
ter of the original work. It is not a different
literary work. Similarly, a text written in short
hand might be said to constitute a description of
the oral sounds of the text if it were spoken aloud
(shorthand being phonetically based), but that
would not make it a different literary work from
the long hand version.
In my view the conversion of a work into a code,
or the conversion of a work originally written in
one code into another code constitutes a transla
tion for the purposes of the Act. In addition, as
noted above, a programmer, in creating a program,
is not thinking in terms of the specifications of the
ROM chip, either in writing the assembly code
version or when the hexadecimal notation is pre
pared. What media is finally chosen for embodi
ment of the program is irrelevant to the program
mer. Accordingly, I find it difficult to accept
counsel for the defendants' argument that the
hexadecimal form of the program is a different
literary work and not a translation of the original.
Expression—Idea—Merger
It is argued that copyright does not extend to
computer programs because (1) copyright protects
the expression of the idea not the idea expressed
and (2) a computer program as embodied in a
ROM chip exhibits a merger of the idea and the
expression of that idea.
Counsel for the defendants relies heavily on the
decision in: Cuisenaire, Georges v. South West
Imports Ltd., [1968] 1 Ex.C.R. 493; (1967), 37
Fox Pat. C. 93 as affirmed [1969] S.C.R. 208;
(1968), 40 Fox Pat. C. 81 and in Cuisenaire v.
Reed, [1963] V.R. 719 (S.C.) Those cases involved
a publication by the plaintiff (a book) in which a
new method of teaching arithmetic was described.
The method used a number of wooden rods of
varying lengths and colours, all having a uniform
thickness (one centimeter square). The book set
out a table describing the number of rods required,
their respective lengths and colours. There was no
indication that the book contained any diagrams or
illustrations of the rods. I reproduce part of the
editor's note at page 95 Fox Pat. C.:
It will be noted that ... the plaintiff did not allege that his
copyright in his book was being infringed but only his copyright
in his rods .... If the rods in issue had been copied from
illustrations in the plaintiff's book, the result might well have
been different, for ids trite law that infringement exists where
a copyright work i§ reproduced "in any material form
whatsoever".
The claim before the Canadian courts focussed
on paragraph 2(v) of the Canadian Act [R.S.C.
1952, c. 551: 1
2....
(v) "every original literary, dramatic, musical and artistic
work" includes every original production in the literary, scien
tific or artistic domain whatever may be the mode or form of its
expression, such as books, pamphlets, and other writings, lec
tures, dramatic or dramatico-musical works, musical works or
compositions with or without words, illustrations, sketches, and
plastic works relative to geography, topography, architecture or
science; [Underlining added.]
The plaintiff argued that it was not necessary to
demonstrate that his rods were artistic, literary,
musical or dramatic because as long as they were
"original productions in the scientific domain"
they were to be considered as falling within the
scope of works protected by copyright. Both the
Exchequer Court and the Supreme Court rejected
that argument.
The plaintiff claimed that even if the rods could
not be said to fall within the Act pursuant to
paragraph 2(v) they were nevertheless literary or
artistic works or works of artistic craftsmanship.
That argument was rejected by both Canadian
Courts on the same ground as it had been by the
Australian Court in Cuisenaire v. Reed. Mr. Jus
tice Noël, at trial, quoted [at pages 517-518] from
' There is no comparable provision in the Australian legisla
tion and therefore the Cuisenaire v. Reed case did deal with
this issue.
the judgment of Mr. Justice Pape, in Cuisenaire v.
Reed at pages 735 and 736:
Where, as here, you have a literary copyright in certain tables
or compilations, there is in my view no infringement of the
copyright in those tables or compilations unless that which is
produced is itself something in the nature of a table or compila
tion which, whether it be in two dimensions or three dimen
sions, and whatever its material form, reproduces those tables.
Were the law otherwise, every person who carried out the
instructions in the handbook in which copyright was held to
subsist in Meccano Ltd. v. Anthony Hordern and Sons Ltd.
(1918), 18 S.R. (N.S.W.) 606, and constructed a model in
accordance with those instructions, would infringe the plain
tiffs literary copyright. Further, as Mr. Fullagar put it, every
body who made a rabbit pie in accordance with the recipe in
Mrs. Beeton's Cookery Book would infringe the literary copy
right in that book.
The Supreme Court upheld the judgment of Mr.
Justice Noël on essentially the same ground. The
Court noted at pages 211 S.C.R.; 84 Fox Pat. C.,
that the original work was the plaintiff's book and
that in seeking to assert a copyright in the rods
which were described in the book, as opposed to
the book itself, the appellant was faced with the
principle that an author has no copyright in ideas
but only in his expression of them. Reference was
made to the application of this principle in Hollin-
rake v. Truswell, [ 1894] 3 Ch. 420 (C.A.), at page
428 and Moreau, Alfred v. St. Vincent, Roland,
[1950] Ex.C.R. 198, at page 203.
In Hollinrake v. Truswell it was sought to assert
copyright in a "sleeve chart" designed to operate
as a pattern for cutting out sleeves. The Court held
that "The thing is in truth a measuring instru
ment: it is no more a chart or plan within the
Copyright Act than is a scaled ruler" (Lindley L.J.
at page 425).
In Moreau v. St. Vincent the plaintiff alleged
the defendant had breached his copyright in "Con-
cours: Recrutement d'Abonnés". This title referred
to a weekly competition which was designed to
increase the circulation of the plaintiff's paper
"L'Information Sportive". The competition
involved a subscription receipt held by the pur
chaser of the paper; a questionnaire relating to
sports topics to be answered by holders of subscrip
tion receipts carrying certain numbers and condi-
tions; and, terms of the contest set out in the
paper. The defendant commenced publication of a
weekly leaflet called "Mots Croisés" which con
tained a competition called "Quizz général de la
publication Loisir Favori Enrg." The Court reject
ed the plaintiff's claim that this activity infringed
his copyright. The Court stated that the plaintiff
had misconceived the nature of copyright and was
really seeking protection of his contest against an
encroaching competitor who was running a contest
of a similar nature. But, there was no copying of
the relevant written texts—it was the idea of run
ning a contest along generally similar lines which
was copied.
It appears from these cases that the principle
that copyright covers the expression of ideas but
not the ideas themselves is used in the jurispru
dence to cover at least two different situations. It
is used in cases such as Hollinrake and Cuisenaire
to indicate that the "work" for which copyright is
sought is not of a type (e.g.: literary, artistic) that
falls within the Act. In Cuisenaire v. Reed it was
held that the rods themselves as physical objects
were not a type of work covered by the Act. It is
used in cases such as Moreau to indicate that the
two works in issue are not, in fact, similar—there
has been no substantial copying. Thus in making
Mrs. Beeton's rabbit pie there is no substantial
copying of the recipe book—the instructions found
therein have been followed but the book has not
been copied.
Neither of these applications of the idea-expres
sion principle applies in the present case. The
program as originally written is copyrightable
subject-matter. There has in fact been copying—
the code read from the defendants' chips is the
same as that which can be read from the plaintiffs'
chips. I do not see that the decision in the Cuise-
naire case in any way assists the defendants in this
case. The computer program when written is clear
ly a literary work. What is more, its embodiment
in a silicon chip retains the form of expression of
the oiriginal work. The program in its source code
version can be retrieved (read) by a process of
translation or translations from the ROM chip.
There was no such relationship between the words
in the book "Les Nombres en Couleurs" and the
rods which were in issue in the Cuisenaire case.
No part of the text of the book could be retrieved
or "read" from the rods.
Counsel argues that in copying the ROM the
defendants are doing no more than following the
recipe prescribed by the program, i.e.: making
Mrs. Beeton's rabbit pie. I think a closer analogy
is that what they are doing is copying the recipe
book.
What then of counsel's argument that a comput
er program exhibits a merger of the idea and the
expression of the idea and therefore it is not
copyrightable. I have considerable difficulty with
this argument from a number of points of view. In
the first place, if this argument is valid then it is
difficult to understand why the concession was
made that the assembly code version of the pro
gram is copyrightable. Surely if there is a merger
of idea and expression, it exists not only in the
machine code version of the program but also in
the written assembly code version as well. Second
ly, the exact scope of the legal rule (if one exists)
that when there is a merger of the idea with its
expression, copyright protection does not operate,
is not at all clear. And, thirdly, the evidence that
there is a multitude of forms of expression in
which any given program can be written seems to
me to demonstrate that there is no merger of the
idea and the expression of the idea with respect to
the programs in issue.
The Cuisenaire, Hollinrake and Moreau deci
sions do not stand for the proposition, urged by
counsel, that when there exists a merger of the
idea and the expression thereof this renders the
work uncopyrightable. I have not been referred to
any United Kingdom, Australian or Canadian case
where that rule has been applied as the ratio of the
case. Counsel's argument in the present case seems
to be that there is a merger of idea and expression
because there can be only one pattern in the ROM
chip, i.e.: one way of structuring that chip to
enable it to replicate the plaintiffs' program. But
this clearly cannot be a case of merger rendering
the device uncopyrightable because the same can
equally be said of every record or cassette tape.
I cannot disguise the fact that in seeking to
apply the alleged merger rule I have considerable
difficulty; it seems to me that many works which
are clearly copyrightable exhibit a merger of the
idea they convey and the expression thereof: a
poem, a play, a painting, a map, a chart. It is only
if the idea communicated by such works is
described in highly abstract, remote and general
terms that one could say there is no merger of the
idea they convey and the expression in which that
idea is conveyed. In addition, the word "idea"
itself is of varying definition. 2
Examples given in argument of the application
of the merger principle are formulations such as
E = mc 2 , the phythogorean theorem, or various
algebraic proofs. It may be that these examples
demonstrate nothing more than that the particular
idea being expressed is really information about
the external world (recognizing that E = mc 2 is in
fact a hypothesis) and that factual information is
something which copyright does not protect. I see
an analogy, for example, between a statement such
as "the Prime Minister of Canada met with the
President of the United States on March 17" and
"the square on the hypotenuse of a right-angled
triangle is equal to the sum of the squares on the
other two sides". Neither of these phrases as such,
apart from a larger text in which they might
appear, would be subject of copyright. The exam
ple of algebraic proofs leads, it seems to me, to an
almost philosophical discussion of the nature of
2 The definition of "idea" in The Concise Oxford Dictionary
(6th ed.) is partly as follows:
1. Archetype, pattern, as distinguished from its realization in
individuals; (Platonic Philos.) eternally existing pattern of
which individual things in any class are imperfect copies. 2.
Conception, plan, of or of thing to be aimed at, created,
discovered, etc., ... 3. Notion conceived by the mind ... way
of thinking ... vague belief, fancy, ... 4. (Descartes, Locke)
immediate object of thought or mental perception; (Kant)
conception of reason transcending all experience; (Hegel)
absolute truth of which all phenomenal existence is the
expression.
intellectual thought. 3 It is a discussion which a
higher Court than this may find it necessary to
consider but which I consider it sufficient to deal
with by noting that a computer program is not
similar to any of the examples cited. It is not a
statement reporting a fact. It is not comparable to
an algebraic proof. It is a creation in the same way
that an instruction book is a creation. While copy
right would not prevent someone making Mrs.
Beeton's rabbit pie (indeed it was to encourage
people to do so that Mrs. Beeton's Book of
Household Management was first published), it
does prevent someone copying the book itself. The
order in which the recipes are listed, the form and
expression in which they are couched are properly
the subject of copyright. This order, form, pattern
of expression of the plaintiffs' program is retained
in the ROM and is copied when the defendants
copy the ROM.
There is another branch of the merger doctrine
which has prevailed in the United States and
which it is necessary to consider. It would appear
to have originated with the decision in Baker v.
Selden, 101 U.S. 99 (1879), a case refered to in
several "commonwealth" decisions, 4 but without
reliance on the full scope of the decision given
therein. Baker v. Selden dealt with copyright
claimed in a book which described a new system of
accounting and particularly accounting forms
(consisting of certain ruled lines and headings)
contained in the book. The Court found that the
defendant's use of the book and development of his
own forms did not breach the plaintiff's copy-
right—i.e.: there was no substantial copying. But
the Court went further and drew a distinction
between works of science or instruction and other
types of works. It held that where a useful art
3 Such proofs are tautological in nature, operate within a
system where the notation or terms of expression can be
completely arbitrarily defined, consist of statements about the
validity of relationships within that system. Indeed one could
ask whether instead of exhibiting a merger of idea and expres
sion, algebraic proofs do not exhibit an independence of the
two.
Hollinrake v. Truswell, supra, p. 184; Cuisenaire v. South
West Imports, supra, p. 182; Cuisenaire v. Reed, supra, p. 182.
And see Harold G. Fox, The Canadian Law of Copyright and
Industrial Designs, 2nd ed. 1967, p. 126; James Lahore, Intel
lectual Property Law in Australia, 1977, pp. 8, 41, 42, 81, 196.
could only be employed by using the forms or
diagrams by which it was explained there would be
no copyright in such forms and diagrams.'
The Court thus proceeded to lay down a much
broader rule than was necessary for the purpose of
the case; it held that the forms in the book were
not protected by copyright. There is no doubt that
this conclusion was in part at least shaped by the
wording of congressional legislative authority
under the United States Constitution. 6 This has
given the United States copyright law a form and
development particular to that country.
The Baker v. Selden decision, even in the
United States, however, has been criticized as
wrongly decided: Nimmer on Copyright, volume 1,
§ 2.18. This criticism proceeds in part on the basis
that it is simply inaccurate to think that exposi
tions on science or the useful arts require that any
particular form provided in the original exposition
must be followed in order to avail oneself of the
"idea" of the work. All such works it is noted can
be expressed in a variety of forms.
This development of copyright law is not one
that has been adopted in this country, as far as I
know. Indeed rejection thereof would seem to be
implicit in the Court of Appeal's decision in
Bulman Group (The) Ltd. v. Alpha One-Write
Systems B.C. Ltd. et al. (1981), 54 C.P.R. (2d)
5 Mr. Justice Bradley (for the Court) stated the following, at
pages 103-104:
The very object of publishing a book on science or the useful
arts is to communicate to the world the useful knowledge
which it contains. But this object would be frustrated if the
knowledge could not be used without incurring the guilt of
piracy of the book. And where the art it teaches cannot be
used without employing the methods and diagrams used to
illustrate the book, or such as are similar to them, such
methods and diagrams are to be considered as necessary
incidents to the art, and given therewith to the public; not
given for the purpose of publication in other works explana
tory of the art, but for the purpose of practical application.
Of course, these observations are not intended to apply to
ornamental designs, or pictorial illustrations addressed to the
taste. Of these it may be said, that their form is their essence,
and their object, the production of pleasure in their contem
plation. [Underlining added.]
6 See particularly Baker v. Selden, at p. 105.
179 and in the subsequent decision of the Trial
Division Bulman Group Ltd. (The) v. "One Write"
Accounting Systems Ltd., [1982] 2 F.C. 327; 62
C.P.R. (2d) 149. At issue in those cases was the
copyrightability of accounting forms. Initially the
claim for copyright in such forms was rejected by
the Trial Division on an application for an inter
locutory injunction. The Court of Appeal over
turned that decision indicating that there was a
seriously arguable case. Following full trial of the
issue copyright was held to exist (this decision was
not appealed to the Court of Appeal).
In any event, I have not been persuaded that
there is a merger of the idea and the expression
thereof in a computer program. The fact that a
program can be written in a variety of different
forms, that the same programmer would not write
a program the same way if he or she were to start
anew a second time, that the programmer is indif
ferent to the medium in which the program is
embodied, all indicate that computer programs do
not fall within the merger exception to copyright-
able subject-matter (if such exception exists).
Copyright Act—Statutory Interpretation
Section 3 of the Copyright Act provides:
3. (1) ... "copyright" means the sole right to produce or
reproduce the work or any substantial part thereof in any
material form whatever, ....[Underlining added.]
These opening words are followed by a list of
specific examples, infra, page 196. The question,
then, is whether these opening words of section 3
encompass the embodiment of the plaintiffs' pro
gram in the ROM chip.
No one disputes, of course, that when the
present Copyright Act was originally enacted by
Parliament in 1921 no thought could have been
given to computer programs and whether they
would be covered by the provisions of the Act. This
is not a relevant consideration, since the only
question is whether the terms of the Act as drafted
can fairly be said to cover such programs as encod
ed in the ROM chip.
The legislative history of the present section 3 of
the Copyright Act is of some assistance in this
regard. The 1842 United Kingdom Copyright Act
(5 & 6 Vict., c. 45 [An Act to amend the Law of
Copyright]), which applied initially to Canada as
well, provided:
... "Copyright" shall be construed to mean the sole and
exclusive Liberty of printing or otherwise multiplying Copies of
any [book] ....
"Book" was defined as including "every Volume,
Part or Division of a Volume, Pamphlet, Sheet of
Letter-press, Sheet of Music, Map, Chart, or
Plan".
In Boosey v. Whight, [1899] 1 Ch. 836,
affirmed [ 1900] 1 Ch. 122 (C.A.), the question
arose as to whether perforated sheets created for
use in player pianos were copies of the relevant
sheet music for the purposes of the Act. It was
argued, by the plaintiff, that one could take the
perforated sheets and write out the notes of music
therefrom in ordinary musical notation providing
one understood the method or pattern of making
the perforations. The defendants argued, on the
other hand, that: the piano rolls were not covered
by the terms of the 1842 Act; music boxes and
barrel-organs which operated on the same princi
ple had long been known; the legislature had not
intended "sheet of music" to cover this type of
apparatus for the mechanical reproduction of
music. The Courts agreed with the defendants'
representations. Mr. Justice Stirling, at trial stated
[at pages 841-842]:
I think it is possible that, with considerable trouble, a person
might so far master the scheme according to which the perfora
tions are made as to be able to read the notes thereby denoted,
but this is not shewn in any case to have been done .... It also
appears to me that for this purpose the rolls constitute an
extremely cumbrous system of writing music, hardly available
without the use of some mechanism which at present does not
exist. Upon the whole, I think it is highly improbable that any
one would ever go to the trouble of acquiring the art of reading
these rolls.
The copyright conferred by that Act [of 1842] appears to me to
be the exclusive liberty of multiplying copies of something in
the nature of a book. The rolls, so far as they contain perfora
tions, are, in fact, used simply as parts of a machine for the
production of musical sounds, not for the purpose of a book.
The Court of Appeal in upholding this decision
agreed: that the then Copyright Act treated a
sheet of music as if it were a book; that a perforat
ed sheet which became part of a musical instru
ment to play the music is different from a sheet of
music which "appeals to the eye", that the defen
dants' perforated sheets were part of a "mechani-
cal contrivance" for producing musical notes.
This decision was followed in several subsequent
decisions, on both sides of the Atlantic ocean:
Newmark v. National Phonograph Company and
Edison Manufacturing Company (1907), 23
T.L.R. 439 (K.B.); Monckton v. Gramophone
Company Limited (1912), 106 L.T. 84 (C.A.);
White-Smith Music Publishing Company v.
Apollo Company, 209 U.S. 1 (1908).
The United Kingdom copyright legislation
(which still applied at that time to Canada) was
amended in 1911' (1 & 2 Geo. 5, c. 46 [Copyright
Act, 1911]). The new provisions in the legislation
of 1911 read:
1....
(2) ... "copyright" means the sole right to produce or
reproduce the work or any substantial part thereof in any
material form whatsoever, to perform, or in the case of a
lecture to deliver, the work ... and shall include the right,—
(a) to produce, reproduce, perform, or publish any transla
tion of the work;
(d) in the case of a literary, dramatic, or musical work, to
make any record, _ perforated roll, cinematograph film, or
other contrivance by means of which the work may be
mechanically performed or delivered ... [Underlining
added.]
And subsection 19(1) was added:
Changes in the United States law seemed to be slower in
coming and in any event copyright legislation in that country
has followed a different legislative history. This is so in part, at
least, because of that country's constitutional framework. See
Apple Computer, Inc. v. Formula Intern., Inc., 562 F.Supp.
775 (U.S. Dist. Ct. (1983)) where it is indicated that before
amendment in 1976 the copyright law of that country only
protected copies which were perceptible to human beings—
things written or printed, and that a requirement of a com
municative function to individuals stemmed from the early
decision of White-Smith Music Publishing Company v. Apollo
Company supra, which had held that a piano roll was not a
form of a work which people could perceive.
19. (1) Copyright shall subsist in records, perforated rolls,
and other contrivances by means of which sounds may be
mechanically reproduced ...
These subsections were eventually carried forward
into the Canadian legislation and appear in almost
identical form as section 3 and subsection 4(3) of
the present Act.
Counsel for the plaintiffs argues that the open
ing words of subsection 1(2), now section 3 of the
Act, were purposely drafted broadly enough to
encompass new technologies which had not been
thought of when the Act was drafted. I agree.
It seems clear that the 1911 amendments did
away with any requirement that in order to be
covered by copyright the copy or reproduction of
the work had to be in a human readable form.
Equally, I think the 1911 amendments did away
with any rule which would deny copyright protec
tion to a work merely because the copy or repro
duction could be characterized as being part of a
machine. 8
The piano rolls in Boosey v. Whight were
removable parts comparable to the modern day
record, cassette or video tape. The ROM chips are
removable with relative ease but they are not
intended to be removed. They are not removable in
the same manner as a floppy disk or a cassette is
removable. The ROM chip is meant to be left in
the machine on a permanent basis. However, the
legislation draws no distinction on this basis.
Accordingly, I think it is irrelevant, in the present
case, whether the program is encoded in a floppy
disk, on a punch card or in a ROM chip. The
copyrightability issue does not differ merely on the
basis of the medium in which the program is
found.
I can see no difference at a physical level be
tween a device such as a record which "contains" a
musical work by virtue of the grooves impressed
therein, and a ROM chip which "contains" a
program by virtue of the pattern of conductive and
8 See Falcon v. Famous Players Film Co., [1926] 2 K.B. 474
(C.A.) for a case which discusses the change brought in the law
by the 1911 amendment.
non-conductive areas created therein. In my view
the opening words of section 3 clearly cover the
plaintiffs' program as embodied in a ROM chip.
Such embodiment is surely the production or
reproduction of the work in a material form, just
as a record or a cassette tape is a production or
reproduction of a work in a material form. (I have
not overlooked the fact that there is a separate
section in the Act which covers copyright in
records.)
In my view the requirement of "readability" or
"appearance to the eye" found in the jurispru
dence requires no more than that there be a
method by which the work in which copyright is
claimed and the work which is alleged to infringe
can be visually compared for the purpose of deter
mining whether copying has occurred. Since in this
case the programs can be "read" out of ROM and
so compared, this requirement is met. I adopt in
this regard the reasoning of Mr. Justice Megarry
in Thrustcode Ltd. v. W.W. Computing Ltd.,
[1983] F.S.R. 502 (Ch.D.), at page 505:
For computers, as for other things, what must be compared are
the thing said to have been copied and the thing said to be an
infringing copy. If these two things are invisible, then normally
they must be reproduced in visible form, or in a form that in
some way is perceptible, before it can be determined whether
one infringes the other.
Normally ... what will be needed is a print-out or other
documentary evidence of the program alleged to have been
copied, and of the alleged infringing program, or sufficient
parts of each.
And those of Mr. Justice Fox in the Apple Com
puter Inc v Computer Edge Pty Ltd case (1984),
53 ALR 225 (F.C.), at page 237:
In my view it does not matter, if it be the fact, that the code
cannot be seen .... The adaptation of the work is rendered
perceptible with a machine. It is sufficient that the code has its
existence in, and is ascertainable from, the chips.
For cases which have dealt with the creation of
a work in a material form different from that in
which it originated see: Chabot v. Davies, [ 1936] 3
All E.R. 221 (Ch.D.) (a store front built from
plans thereof); King Features Syndicate, Incorpo
rated v. Kleeman (O. & M.) Ld., [1941] A.C. 417
(H.L.) (brooches and dolls from a Popeye car
toon); Dorling v. Honnor and Another, [1964]
R.P.C. 160 (C.A.) (boats from plans); and Baylin-
er Marine Corp. v. Dorai Boats Ltd., [1986] 3
F.C. 346; (1985), 5 C.P.R. (3d) 289 (T.D.). These
cases also demonstrate that a copy of a reproduc
tion which reproduction exists in a different ma
terial form from the original is still an infringe
ment of copyright in the original. The reasoning
found in these cases is applicable to the present
situation although I note that the plaintiffs do not
claim copyright in the ROM chip itself as a device
but only in the program encoded therein. In this
respect it differs from the three-dimensional cases
cited above. In my view this strengthens rather
than weakens the plaintiffs' claim to copyright.
As I understand counsel's argument it is that
even if the reproduction itself does not have to be
in human readable form there is a requirement
that the purpose for which that reproduction is
made must ultimately be to communicate the work
to human beings. A record or cassette when used
with a machine produces sounds for human listen
ing while the ROM chip does not so communicate
to humans as its primary function. As noted above,
it can be used to so communicate and for certain
limited purposes is so used, but that is not its
primary purpose.
It is argued that the requirement that the pri
mary purpose of the work be to communicate to
human beings in order for copyright to exist is
found in both the context of the Act and in the
wording of specific sections thereof. The context
argument is one that has found favour with some
courts. I note particularly the dissenting decision
of Mr. Justice Sheppard in the Computer Edge
case supra, page 194, at page 277. His remarks
were addressed to the meaning of the words trans
lation and adaptation in the Australian Copyright
Act but it is the approach which counsel urges on
this Court:
There seems to be running through these various provisions [of
the Act] the idea or notion that what is the subject of copyright
(whether a work or an adaptation thereof) will, although not
immediately published and perhaps never published, be capable
of being published and thus being seen or heard. The very idea
of publishing is that something should be seen or heard.
It is argued that even if the context of the Act
does not make it clear that computer programs in
their machine code version fall outside the Act, the
textual wording of pertinent sections does so indi
cate. Paragraph 2(v) 9 and section 3 are referred
to. Paragraph 2(v) states:
2....
(y) "every original literary, dramatic, musical and artistic
work" includes every original production in the literary,
scientific or artistic domain, whatever may be the mode or
form of its expression, such as books, pamphlets, and other
writings, lectures, dramatic or dramatico-musical works,
musical works or compositions with or without words, illus
trations, sketches, and plastic works relative to geography,
topography, architecture or science. [Underlining added.]
And section 3:
3. (1) For the purposes of this Act, "copyright" means the
sole right to produce or reproduce the work or any substantial
part thereof in any material form whatever, to perform, or in
the case of a lecture to deliver, the work or any substantial part
thereof in public; if the work is unpublished, to publish the
work or any substantial part thereof; and includes the sole right
(a) to produce, reproduce, perform or publish any translation
of the work;
(b) in the case of a dramatic work, to convert it into a novel
or other non-dramatic work;
(c) in the case of a novel or other non-dramatic work, or of
an artistic work, to convert it into a dramatic work, by way
of performance in public or otherwise;
(d) in the case of a literary, dramatic, or musical work, to
make any record, perforated roll, cinematograph film, or
other contrivance by means of which the work may be
mechanically performed or delivered;
(e) in the case of any literary, dramatic, musical or artistic
work, to reproduce, adapt and publicly present such work by
cinematograph, if the author has given such work an original
character; but if such original character is absent the
cinematographic production shall be protected as a
photograph;
(J) in case of any literary, dramatic, musical or artistic work,
to communicate such work by radio communication;
and to authorize any such acts as aforesaid. [Underlining
added.]
9 The 1952 consolidation of the Copyright Act is referred to
for ease of reference. The definition of "every literary, dramat
ic, musical and artistic work" remains the same in the 1970
consolidated version of the Act but no paragraph designation is
given.
The general words, both "whatever may be the
mode or form of its expression" in paragraph 2(v)
and "in any material form whatever" in section 3,
it is said, must be interpreted by reference to the
particular examples which follow in each case.
That is, in the case of paragraph 2(v) "books,
pamphlets..." and in the case of section 3 the
particular forms of production or reproduction
itemized by each of paragraphs (a) to (f). It is
argued that the principle of statutory interpreta
tion noscitur a sociis is applicable.
In my view counsel's arguments based on the
context of the Act and on the specific wording of
the sections thereof are conclusively answered by
section 3 itself. Section 3 provides that " 'copy-
right' means the sole right to produce or reproduce
the work ... in any material form whatever". In
my view that clearly covers the program as embod
ied in the ROM chip. To find otherwise, it seems
to me, would require reading words into section 3
of the Copyright Act which are not there.
With respect to the argument based on the
principle noscitur a sociis, that principle is only
applicable to cut down the general words of a
statutory provision when it is clear that Parliament
did not intend a broad one. Parliament's intention
in the case of section 3, and perhaps also para
graph 2(v), is very clear. The enumerations are
used as examples. The general wording is said to
"include" the specifics. In that context, the princi
ple noscitur a sociis can have no role to play.
It is also argued that it is clear that the opening
words of section 3 were not intended to cover
works in "any" material form because if this were
so there would have been no need to include in the
Act paragraph 3(1)(d). The text of paragraph
3(1)(d) itself indicates, it is said, that only contriv
ances which communicate to human beings were
meant to be covered by the Act. This last is based
in part on the fact that "delivery" in section 2 of
the Act only refers to delivery in relation to a
lecture and that "performance" is defined as
meaning any acoustic or visual representation. In
this regard counsel for the defendants argues that
application programs which cause a text or graph
ics to be displayed on the screen, or which result in
sounds being emitted or music being played are
covered by copyright. In his view they are contriv-
ances (in the chip version) by means of which the
work may be mechanically delivered.
The argument based on paragraph 3(1)(d) I
find unconvincing. It has a two-edged quality. It
can equally be asked why, if Parliament only
intended to cover records or contrivances which
utter sounds or communicate to humans, the open
ing words of section 3 were drafted so broadly.
The references to the definition sections are not
persuasive. They only purport to define one par
ticular aspect of delivery as it relates to lectures;
no all inclusive definition is given of that word.
The definition of performance is irrelevant since
no one has suggested that it applies in the present
case. Also, I have difficulty with the distinction
counsel makes between programs which result in
something being displayed on the screen and those
(such as ROM) which do not. When "something"
is displayed on the screen it is not the program
(i.e.: it is not the original or a hexadecimal version
thereof which is displayed). The program remains
invisible unless disassembled by the translation
processes similar to that used to "read" the ROM.
In addition, I think there is merit in the argu
ment that the ROM chip, whatever the interpreta
tion of the opening words of section 3, can be said
to fall within paragraph 3(1)(d) as a contrivance
by means of which the work may be delivered. The
program (as noted above) can be delivered to the
screen of the monitor, or as a print-out to be read
by human beings. I do not find it necessary to
decide whether "delivery" to the CPU satisfies
paragraph 3(1)(d).
Reference is also made to sections 45 and 46, as
support for the conclusion that Parliament did not
intend to cover works in "any" material form.
Section 45 states that copyright does not exist
outside the parameters of the Act and section 46
excludes from the' Act's protection certain designs
registerable under the Industrial Design Act,
R.S.C. 1970, c. I-8. Section 45 of the Act is of no
assistance; it adds nothing to a determination of
what is and what is not covered by the Act. Nor is
section 46 relevant since it relates to works regis-
terable under the Industrial Design Act, which a
ROM chip, at least in so far as the program
contained therein is concerned, manifestly is not.
Another contention put forward is that because
the Copyright Act can give rise to penal conse
quences (section 25) it should be interpreted res
trictively, that is in favour of the defendants. 10 The
present case is not one concerning the commission
of an offence. It is a civil action between two
private parties. The Federal Court of Appeal in
Dalton v. Canadian Human Rights Commission,
[1986] 2 F.C. 141; 63 N.R. 383, at pages 146-149
F.C.; 386-387 N.R., cast doubt on the appropriate
ness of applying the restrictive rule of statutory
interpretation applicable to criminal offences in
such circumstances. And indeed the Ontario Court
of Appeal in R. v. Budget Car Rentals (Toronto)
Ltd." seems to have indicated that contrary to the
defendants' interpretation of that case, the rule
means nothing more than that penal statutes are to
be interpreted as are all statutes, in accordance
with the ordinary meaning of the language they
employ. In any event, I would only find it neces
sary to consider the appropriateness of the defen
dants' restrictive interpretation argument if I
found section 3 of the Copyright Act to be ambig
uous. I do not find such an ambiguity. As noted
above "to produce or reproduce ... in any material
form" seems to me to be quite clear.
Policy Considerations
It is argued that copyright should not be held to
apply to the program as encoded in the ROM chip
because this constitutes the granting of a monopo
ly on an item of commerce—a restriction on com
merce which copyright legislation was never
intended to create. It is contended that some pro
grams are used in connection with machines to
10 In support of this position are cited: Canusa Records Inc.
et al. v. Blue Crest Music, Inc. et al. (1976), 30 C.P.R. (2d) 11
(F.C.A.), at p. 13; R. v. Budget Car Rentals (Toronto) Ltd.
(1981), 31 O.R. (2d) 161 (C.A.), at pp. 165, 167, 168, 173; R.
v. Philips Electronics Ltd.—Philips Electronique Ltee (1980),
30 O.R. (2d) 129 (C.A.), at pp. 137-139; Tuck v. Priester
(1887), 19 Q.B.D. 629, at p. 638.
" Ibid.
control certain manufacturing processes (special
purpose programs) and that these can be covered
by patent law. Consequently, it is argued copyright
should not extend to computer programs because
an overlap of copyright and patent law should be
avoided. Counsel's two last policy arguments are:
Parliament is presently in the process of discussing
the extent to which copyright protection should
apply to computer programs and to hold that the
Act as presently drafted applies is to usurp Parlia
ment's function; there has been considerable
uncertainty as to whether the present legislation
extends to computer programs and the defendants
should not be penalized for acting as they did
when there has been so much debate surrounding
the subject.
With respect to the first argument, the purpose
of the Copyright Act is and always has been to
grant a monopoly. No distinction is made therein
as to the purpose of the work created—for enter
tainment, instruction or other purposes. The legis
lation historically, in my view had two purposes: to
encourage disclosure of works for the "advance-
ment of learning", and to protect and reward the
intellectual effort of the author (for a limited
period of time) in the work. A book is an article of
commerce, as is a map or a chart. The interpreta
tion of the legislation which the defendants urge,
based on a view that the Act was not intended to
interfere with commerce, is both not accurate and
would add a gloss to the statute which its wording
does not bear.
With respect to the second argument, as I read
the authorities and references to which I have been
referred by counsel 12 they indicate that computer
' 2 Barrigar, Legal Protection of Software from Unauthorized
Use: Proprietary and Contractual Rights (1976), 30 C.P.R.
(2d) 159; Re Application Number 961,392 (1971), 5 C.P.R.
(2d) 162 (Pat. App. Bd.); Gottschalk, Comr. Pats. v. Benson,
175 USPQ 673 (S.C. 1972); Dann, Comr. Pats. v. Johnston,
189 USPQ 257 (S.C. 1976); Schlumberger Canada Ltd. v.
Commissioner of Patents, [1982] 1 F.C. 845; (1981), 56
C.P.R. (2d) 204 (C.A.), application for leave to appeal to
Supreme Court of Canada dismissed (1981), 63 C.P.R. (2d)
261; Re Bendix Corporation Application (Now Patent No.
1,176,734) (1984), 5 C.P.R. (3d) 198 (Pat. App. Bd.); Re
Application for Patent of Dissly Research Corp. (Now Patent
No. 1,188,811) (1984), 6 C.P.R. (3d) 420 (Pat. App. Bd.). See
also Diamond, Comr. Pats. v. Diehr and Lutton, 209 USPQ 1
(S.C. 1981).
programs are not per se patentable but that an
apparatus or process that meets the standards of
novelty and unobviousness required by the Patent
Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. P-4, will not be disqualified
from patent protection merely because a computer
is used to operate the apparatus or implement the
process. In addition, I do not see that overlapping
areas of the law are particularly unusual (refer-
ence need only be made to the fields of tort and
contract). Nor do I see it as the role of the courts
to frame decisions to avoid such results. In addi
tion, I would note that the present case does not
deal with a special purpose program. It concerns
the operation of a general purpose computer,
although I must admit that I do not, at the
moment, see any rationale for distinguishing be
tween the two. I note that Mr. Justice Megarry in
the Thrustcode case, supra, page 194, did not
think it necessary to draw such a distinction.
In support of this second argument the Court of
Appeal decision in Schlumberger Canada Ltd. v.
Commissioner of Patents" was relied upon. I do
not see that that case assists the defendants. It
held that a process involving the use of a computer
program to perform certain calculations by refer
ence to certain specifications was not patentable
subject-matter. It was held that the process being
claimed was a mathematical formula which could
be assimilated to a "mere scientific principle or
abstract theorem" for which subsection 28(3) of
the Patent Act prescribes that "no patent shall
issue". As noted above, a computer program in my
view is not the same as a mathematical formula. In
addition, the task a computer is programmed to
perform ("the process" in the Schlumberger case)
must be distinguished from the program written to
accomplish that task. Merely because the result is
not new (e.g.: calculations based on the measure
ment of bore holes) does not mean that the pro
gram written to accomplish that task is not copy-
rightable—in the same way a text book on
mathematics or an instruction manual is copy-
rightable.
Ibid.
With respect to the third policy argument, I was
referred to proposals for the revision of the Copy
right Act found in a publication entitled From
Gutenberg to Telidon issued by the Minister of
Consumer and Corporate Affairs in 1984. At
pages 79-83 of that text the view is expressed that
the existing copyright regime is inappropriate for
computer programs; that the term of protection
should be much shorter (e.g.: 5 years for a pro
gram in human readable form). I was also referred
to the report of the Parliamentary Sub-committee
on the Revision of Copyright which issued more
recently, entitled "A Charter of Rights for Crea
tors". That report recommends, at pages 45-46,
that the full regime of protection of copyright law
(life of the author plus 50 years) is appropriate for
computer programs, and that no distinction should
be made between programs in human readable
form and in machine readable form. The juxtapo
sition of these two is ample demonstration, if
demonstration is needed, as to why courts consist
ently take the position that such policy consider
ations are not relevant to the role of applying the
existing law.
The fourth aspect of counsel's "policy argu
ments" is also not relevant. Whether and how the
law applies in given fact situations is the subject of
daily debate. If it were not, the courts would be
empty places. The closing comments of Mr. Jus
tice Collier in Bulman Group Ltd. (The) v. "One
Write" Accounting Systems Ltd., supra, page 190,
at pages 335-336 F.C.; 156 C.P.R., apply to the
facts in this case:
The defendant was wrong, in law and in fact, in its view that
the plaintiffs forms could not be the subject of copyright.
To my mind, there were reasonable grounds to assume copy
right might well exist. The defendant chose to take that chance.
A wrong assessment of the legal and factual position cannot be
an excuse to avert the remedy of damages and an accounting of
profits, as well as the other relief claimed by the plaintiff.
See also Compo Company Ltd. v. Blue Crest
Music Inc. et al., [1980] 1 S.C.R. 357; (1979), 45
C.P.R. (2d) 1, at pages 375-376 S.C.R.; 15 C.P.R.
There was some evidence that the Copyright
Office of the Department of Consumer and Corpo
rate Affairs took an uncertain attitude as to
whether or not the Copyright Act applied to com
puter programs. A pamphlet "available" in the
Copyright Office and dated 1982 contains the
statement:
It is unclear under the current Act, which came into effect in
1924, whether or not computer programs or software are
protected. However, written instructions for the use of a pro
gram are subject to copyright protection as "literary" works.
There is no evidence that this pamphlet was dis
tributed to the public or that any of the defendants
had copies of it at the relevant time. Accordingly, I
do not see that it has any role to play with respect
to the present litigation.
Jurisprudence Existing Respecting Computer
Programs
There are a growing number of cases in jurisdic-
tions where the copyright law is not too dissimilar
from our own which have held that computer
programs in their machine code version are pro
tected by the copyright law applicable existing in
that jurisdiction. '4 Not only is there such a trend
abroad, but a similar phenomenon can also be
discerned in this country. 15 Counsel for the defen
dants argues that these are all interlocutory
applications where the Court has not had the
benefit of trial and expert evidence. Secondly, he
14 Sega Enterprises Limited v. Richards and Another, [1983]
F.S.R. 73 (Ch.D.); Thrustcode Ltd. v. W.W. Computing Ltd.,
supra, p. 194; Northern Office Microcomputers (Pty) Ltd. v.
Rosenstein, [1982] F.S.R. 124 (S.C. S. Afr.); Apple Computer
Inc v Computer Edge Pty Ltd, supra, p. 194.
15 Apple Computer Inc. v. Computermat Inc. (1983), 1
C.I.P.R. 1 (Ont. H.C.); Apple Computer, Inc. v. Minitronics of
Canada Ltd. et al. (1985), 7 C.P.R. (3d) 104 (F.C.T.D.),
affirmed (1985), 8 C.P.R. (3d) 431 (F.C.A.); Société (La)
d'Informatique R.D.G. Inc. v. Dynabec Ltée et al. (1984), 6
C.P.R. (3d) 299 (Que. S.C.); F & I Retail Systems Ltd. v.
Thermo Guard Automotive Products Canada Ltd. et al.
(unreported decision of the Supreme Court of Ontario of June
26, 1984); Logo Computer Systems Inc. c. 115778 Canada Inc.
et al. (unreported decision of the Quebec Superior Court of
October 25, 1983); Nintendo of America, Inc. v. Coinex Video
Games Inc., [1983] 2 F.C. 189 (C.A.), which deals with the
issue in a peripheral way; Spacefile Ltd. v. Smart Computing
Systems Ltd. et al. (1983), 75 C.P.R. (2d) 281 (Ont. H.C.).
argues that in giving these decisions, the courts
have thought that the program itself, in a written
notational form, is actually within the computer
rather than being found therein as an electrical
code, or as a device designed to replicate that code.
I agree that most of the jurisprudence is of an
interlocutory nature, although the decision of the
Appeal Division of the Federal Court of Australia
in the Computer Edge case supra, page 194, con
tains a thorough treatment of the issue and was
given after extensive evidence had been heard. I
find its reasoning of considerable persuasive value.
It dealt, of course, with the Australian legislation,
which does not contain a broad statement of
applicability (to the production of a work in any
material form whatever) such as is found in sec
tion 3 of our Act, but that does not lessen the value
of the reasons found therein.
With respect to counsel's contention that courts
think the written program as a writing, is in the
silicon chip, I disagree. There is a tendency in the
decisions to talk of the machine language as being
within the machine (in terms of ones and zeros).
This is the way computer scientists talk. I do not
think, however, it is accurate to say that courts
granting interlocutory injunctions have failed to
recognize the real nature of a computer program. I
note, for example, in Sega Enterprises Limited v.
Richards and Another, supra, page 203, at page
75, Mr. Justice Goulding of the High Court,
Chancery Division wrote:
On the evidence before me in this case I am clearly of the
opinion that copyright ... subsists in the assembly code pro
gram of the game "Frogger." The machine code program
derived from it by the operation of part of the system of the
computer called the assembler is to be regarded, I think, as
either a reproduction or an adaptation of the assembly code
program .... [Underlining added.]
And in Thrustcode Ltd. v. W.W. Computing Ltd.,
supra, page 194, at page 505, Mr. Justice Megarry
of the High Court, Chancery Division states that:
In the case of computer programs, the software appears to
consist of articles which by magnetic or electrical means will
make the hardware do certain things, together with what is
recorded on various tapes and discs. By means of this, the
letters, signs and numbers of the program may be made to
appear on a screen or on a print-out; and if this is done, then
the familiar process of comparison [of two written texts] is
made possible. [Underlining added.]
And in the Computer Edge case, supra, page 194,
Mr. Justice Lockhart stated at page 263:
There is perhaps room for debate as to the precise processes
used in the Wombat ROMs and EPROM to generate the
relevant sequences of electrical impulses; but the inescapable
conclusion is that the Wombat ROMs and EPROMs contain
representations of the very same sequence of impulses as are
represented in the Apple ROMs.
I had occasion to consider much of the jurispru
dence of other jurisdictions in International Busi
ness Machines Corporation v. Ordinateurs Spi-
rales Inc., [1985] 1 F.C. 190; (1984), 80 C.P.R.
(2d) 187 (T.D.). I have not referred to that deci
sion at any length in these reasons and do not
propose to do so. This should not be taken as an
indication that I disagree with the views expressed
therein but merely that I consider it inappropriate
to rely on my own decision given in an interlocuto
ry proceeding, for the purposes of the present case.
Of considerable significance is the fact that the
Quebec Superior Court more recently, in Société
(La) d'Informatique R.D.G. Inc. v. Dynabec Ltée
et al., 16 affirmed by the Quebec Court of Appeal,"
upheld copyright in four application programs.
The Superior Court relied heavily on the Comput
er Edge decision, supra, page 194, and in the
characterization therein of programs in a chip
form as translations or adaptations of the original
work. The Quebec Court of Appeal referred to the
breadth of section 3 of our Act.
EDITOR'S NOTE
In the Mackintosh action, there was evidence
that one of the defendants, House of Semicon
ductors, purchased blank chips and programmed
them—for itself and the defendant Mackintosh—
by burning in the plaintiffs' program. The chips
16 Ibid.
17 (1985), 6 C.P.R. (3d) 322 (Que. C.A.).
were then placed in computers sold as "Apple-
compatible". On occasion, House of Semiconduc
tors imported from Taiwan ROM chips containing
the plaintiffs' program.
Liability of the Defendants Chico Levy and James
Begg
The claims against the individual defendants,
Chico Levy and James Begg, are contested on the
grounds that they are not liable in their personal
capacity for the acts of the respective corporations
with which they were involved (Mackintosh and
House of Semiconductors on the one hand and
115778 and 131375 Canada Inc. on the other) on
the basis of Salomon v. Salomon & Co., [1897]
A.C. 22 (H.L.). I have no difficulty in finding both
individuals personally liable. The personal liability
of directors or officers of a company in the case of
patent infringement was considered by the Federal
Court of Appeal in Mentmore Manufacturing Co.,
Ltd. et al. v. National Merchandise Manufactur
ing Co. Inc. et al. (1978), 40 C.P.R. (2d) 164. The
Court at page 171 quoted 29 Hals., 3rd ed., page
90, para. 192:
The directors of a company are not personally liable for
infringements by the company, even if they are managing
directors or the sole directors and shareholders, unless either
(1) they have formed the company for the purpose of infring
ing; or (2) they have directly ordered or authorised the acts
complained of; or (3) they have so authorised or ordered by
implication.
The Court went on at page 172 to indicate that
the fact of owning (as shareholder) and being the
director of a company was not itself sufficient to
warrant an inference that an individual had
authorized acts of infringement done by the com
pany. Whether this was so would be a question of
fact to be decided on the circumstances of each
case. At page 174 it said:
I do not think we should go so far as to hold that the director
or officer must know or have reason to know that the acts
which he directs or procures constitute infringement. That
would be to impose a condition of liability that does not exist
for patent infringement generally. I note such knowledge has
been held in the United States not to be material where the
question is the personal liability of directors or officers: see
Deller's Walker on Patents, 2nd ed. (1972), vol. 7, pp. 117-8.
But in my opinion there must be circumstances from which it is
reasonable to conclude that the purpose of the director or
officer was not the direction of the manufacturing and selling
activity of the company in the ordinary course of his relation
ship to it but the deliberate, wilful and knowing pursuit of a
course of conduct that was likely to constitute infringement or
reflected an indifference to the risk of it. The precise formula
tion of the appropriate test is obviously a difficult one. Room
must be left for a broad appreciation of the circumstances of
each case to determine whether as a matter of policy they call
for personal liability. Opinions might differ as to the appropri
ateness of the precise language of the learned trial Judge in
formulating the test which he adopted—"deliberately or reck
lessly embarked on a scheme, using the company as a vehicle,
to secure profit or custom which rightfully belonged to the
plaintiffs"—but I am unable to conclude that in its essential
emphasis it was wrong. [Underlining added.]
For the application of these principles to a case of
trade mark infringement see: Visa International
Service Association v. Visa Motel Corporation,
carrying on business as Visa Leasing et al.
(1984), 1 C.P.R. (3d) 109 (B.C.C.A.).
The principles are equally applicable to copy
right infringement. I note that it is easy to acci
dentally or inadvertently infringe a patent; it is not
easy to accidentally or inadvertently copy the work
of another. This may explain why the Court of
Appeal in the Mentmore case found that the
individual defendants were not personally liable
while the British Columbia Court of Appeal was
easily able to so find in the Visa decision.
It is abundantly clear to me that both Chico
Levy and James Begg knowingly pursued a course
of action that would constitute infringement. With
respect to Mr. Begg, even if I believed his evidence
concerning illness and non-participation in the day
to day business affairs of the company, his actions
would still be such as to demonstrate a reckless
"indifference as to the risk". But, I think the
evidence demonstrates more than indifference. No
corroborating evidence was given as to his "ill-
ness", no medical evidence, no evidence of family;
he did not appear as a witness at trial; only his
self-serving statements on the examination for dis
covery were read in. The documentary evidence
(his initials on financial statements, his signature
on all cheques, his involvement with the leasing
arrangements) all indicate a more intimate
involvement with the affairs of the companies than
his statements on discovery would attempt to
indicate.
In so far as copyright infringement is concerned
a person infringes by virtue of subsection 17(1)
and section 3, if they "authorize" or purport to
authorize the doing of any act which is reserved to
the owner of the copyright. "Authorize" has been
defined by the jurisprudence as meaning "sanc-
tion, approve, and countenance". 18 And it has been
said in C.B.S. Inc. v. Ames Records & Tapes Ltd.,
[1981] 2 W.L.R. 973 (Ch.D.), at pages 987-988:
... indifference, exhibited by acts of commission or ommission,
may reach a degree from which authorisation or permission
may be inferred. It is a question of fact in each case what is the
true inference to be drawn from the conduct of the person ....
There is no doubt that even if I believed that
Mr. Begg took a somewhat limited part in the day
to day business activities of the Microcom compa
nies his inactivity or indifference would be of such
a nature that authorization of or permission to
engage in the infringement should be inferred.
Certainly there is no doubt that Chico Levy
authorized the infringing activities of Mackintosh
and House of Semiconductors.
Liability of the Defendants Repco, Nat Levy and
Joseph Levy
What then of the corporate defendant Repco
and the individual defendants Nat and Joseph
Levy? It is not useful to try to analyse the situa
tion from the point of view of tort law. The
Supreme Court stated in Compo Company Ltd. v.
Blue Crest Music Inc. et al., supra, page 202, at
pages 372-373 S.C.R.; 13 C.P.R.:
... copyright law is neither tort law nor property law in
classification, but is statutory law .... Copyright legislation
simply creates rights and obligations upon the terms and in the
circumstances set out in the statute.... It does not assist the
interpretive analysis to import tort concepts. The legislation
speaks for itself and the actions of the appellant must be
measured according to the terms of the statute.
18 Falcon v. Famous Players Film Co., supra, p. 193, at p.
491.
As is obvious from the facts set out above that
both Nat and Joseph Levy and the corporate
defendant, Repco, through their acts aided and
supported Chico, in his infringement activities.
According to the evidence Nat played a more
vigorous role than Joseph. Counsel for the defen
dants argued that Nat and Joseph had no actual
knowledge of the infringement—they knew their
brother was in the computer business, they knew
he was selling Apple compatible computers—but it
is argued that that does not fix them with knowl
edge of the copying activity. I am asked to con
strue the evidence as signifying only that Nat and
Joseph Levy gave such help to their younger broth
er, Chico, in starting his new businesses as any
brother would give (e.g.: shared rental space; non-
collection of rent except by means of an "adjust-
ment" at year end; guarantees of credit; placing
advertisements because the newspaper would not
enter into such contracts with Chico's fledgling
businesses until they became established).
I cannot accept this construction of the evi
dence. It is simply not tenable in the circumstances
of this case to conclude that Nat and Joseph Levy
did not have knowledge of the copying activity
being carried on. A determination of knowledge is
a question of inference from the facts in a given
case. Refer: RCA Corporation y Custom Cleared
Sales Pty Ltd (1978), 19 ALR 123 (N.S.W.C.A.),
at page 126. I refer also to Albert v. S. Hoffnung
& Co. Ltd. (1921), 22 S.R. 75 (N.S.W.S.C.), at
page 81; Clarke, Irwin & Co. Ltd. v. C. Cole &
Co. Ltd. (1960), 33 C.P.R. 173 (Ont. H.C.), at
page 181; Simon & Schuster Inc. et al. v. Coles
Book Stores Ltd. (1975), 9 O.R. (2d) 718 (H.C.).
Those cases conclude that "knowledge" in compa
rable contexts means notice of facts such as would
suggest to a reasonable man that a breach of the
copyright law was being committed—"notice,
which would put a reasonable man on enquiry"
(Albert case, supra, at pages 81-82). Indeed, I
think the defendants, Repco, Joseph and Nat
Levy, in the present case had more than merely
notice of facts which would lead a reasonable
person to think that a breach of copyright law was
being committed. My conclusion is that Nat and
Joseph Levy and Repco through them knew of the
copyright infringement activity. This conclusion is
drawn from the fact that the business carried on
by the three brothers before Mackintosh and
House of Semiconductors were created was in a
related field to that for which the two companies
were created. Also, Repco was closely linked to the
business carried on by Mackintosh and House of
Semiconductors once they were created. In addi
tion, there was not only geographical proximity
but integration of some of their business activities.
Nat Levy personally acted in his brother's stead in
the retail outlet and at trade shows; he suggested
the name Mackintosh for one of the companies;
Repco's business premises, telephone number and
secretarial services were also those of Mackintosh.
It is simply not credible to believe that there was
no knowledge by Nat and Joseph Levy and
through them by Repco of the copyright infringe
ment activity.
Knowledge alone, however, is not enough to
make an individual liable for copyright infringe
ment. Can it be said that either the corporate
defendant, Repco, or the individual defendants,
Joseph or Nat Levy, engaged in activities which
bring them within section 3 of the Act as having
authorized the reproduction of the plaintiffs' work,
or within subsection 17(4) of the Act. Subsection
17(4) of the Copyright Act provides:
17....
(4) Copyright in a work shall also be deemed to be infringed
by any person who
(a) sells or lets for hire, or by way of trade exposes or offers
for sale or hire;
(b) distributes either for the purposes of trade, or to such an
extent as to affect prejudicially the owner of the copyright;
(c) by way of trade exhibits in public; or
(d) imports for sale or hire into Canada;
any work that to his knowledge infringes copyright or would
infringe copyright if it had been made within Canada.
The activities of Nat Levy, and through him
those of Repco, clearly bring those two defendants
within the terms of subsection 17(4) of the Copy
right Act. Their role as purchasers of the newspa
per advertisements for House of Semiconductors in
my view constitutes "by way of trade" having
"offered for sale" the infringing articles and thus
brings them within the proscribed activity of para
graph (a). Also, Nat Levy personally involved
himself in various activities, at trade shows and in
the retail outlet at Brunswick Avenue. I think his
activity in this regard was sufficient to constitute
offering goods to the public (paragraph (a)) and
exhibiting such by way of trade (paragraph (c)).
In addition, I make reference to Mr. Justice
Addy's finding in Proctor & Gamble Co. v. Bris-
tol-Myers Canada Ltd. (1978), 39 C.P.R. (2d)
145, at pages 165-167 where it was held that the
defendant's activities of aiding and abetting
infringement could in certain circumstances be
sufficient to constitute infringement itself. I find
this principle applicable to this case and the activi
ties of Chico Levy and Repco fall within it.
I do not think, however, that there is enough
evidence to allow me to conclude that Joseph
Levy's activities, in his personal capacity bring him
within subsection 17(4). The only evidence con
cerning his involvement personally is that he gave
guarantees of credit for the importation of infring
ing ROMs, with knowledge that his brother was
carrying on an infringing activity. I do not think
this falls within any of the paragraphs of subsec
tion 17(4) nor within section 3 of the Act as
authorizing the production or reproduction of the
plaintiffs' program. I think it would do violence to
the language of the statute to find that Joseph
Levy "authorized" the infringing activities defined
in section 3 by merely guaranteeing credits to
enable that activity to take place. I adopt the
reasoning found at page 984 of the Ames decision,
supra, page 208:
Any ordinary person would, I think, assume that an authorisa
tion can only come from somebody having or purporting to
have authority and that an act is not authorised by somebody
who merely enables or possibly assists or even encourages
another to do that act, but does not purport to have any
authority which he can grant to justify the doing of the act.
[Underlining added.]
Accordingly, the action as against Joseph Levy
will be dismissed.
Comments on the Evidence
I am mindful of the fact that it is quite likely
that a higher Court than this will soon be seized of
this case. Accordingly, I would indicate that I have
relied heavily on the initial evidence of Professor
Graham and on the evidence of Professor Burkow-
ski. Most of the "rebuttal" evidence I did not find
helpful. I use the word "rebuttal" with some reser
vation since the evidence offered under that rubric
was somewhat more extensive than appropriately
should be led in that context. In any event, I have
not relied on the rebuttal evidence to any great
extent. In particular, I found it almost incredulous
that the plaintiffs' "hardware" expert refused to
express himself except in software terms. Also, the
"table of abstractions" by reference to which I was
encouraged to accept the proposition that it was
inappropriate to talk of programs and circuitry or
voltage levels in the same sentence was not
convincing.
Remedies
The plaintiffs seek injunctions restraining the
defendants and their respective servants and
agents from importing, selling and distributing
computers and computer components under the
name Mackintosh or Microcom or otherwise which
contain a copy or substantial copy of the literary
works "AUTOSTART ROM" or "APPLESOFT"; an
accounting of all profits made by the defendants as
a result of the sale of computers and components
which infringe the said copyrights of Apple Com
puter; and delivery up to the plaintiffs of all copies
of computers and computer components in the
possession of any of the defendants which contain
a copy or substantial copy of the said copyrights.
The defendants argue that both the claim for an
accounting as to profits and for delivery up of all
computers and computer components which con
tain a copy of the programs is too broad. I accept
that argument with respect to the delivery up of
the computers and computer components. The
ROM chips are easily removable. I do not see that
there is any justification for the delivery to the
plaintiffs of the other computer parts: the key
board; the casings; the circuit boards etc. An order
will issue requiring delivery up only of the devices
containing the program, all copies of the program
and all devices containing copies.
With respect to the accounting as to profits I do
not consider the claim too broad. It is clear that
the profit made by selling the "Apple compatible"
computers derived principally from the fact that
the plaintiffs' program was contained therein.
There is nothing to make me think that the com
puters without the ROM chips could have been
sold for much more than the cost price paid by the
defendants for the component parts. In my view,
the profit arising from the sale of the computers as
a whole derived mainly from the fact that they
were "Apple compatible" and inclusive of the
copied programs therein. In addition, I do not see
that the profit derived from the sales can be
somehow or other divided as between that attribut
able to the chips and that arising from the other
components of the computer. Accordingly, an
accounting of profits as requested by the plaintiffs
is appropriate.
Counsel for the plaintiffs asked that argument
as to costs be deferred until after judgment was
rendered. Thus, I make no order in that regard
except with respect to those defendants against
whom action was discontinued by the plaintiffs.
You are being directed to the most recent version of the statute which may not be the version considered at the time of the judgment.