Judgments

Decision Information

Decision Content

A-536-85
Dorat Boats Ltd. (Appellant)
v.
Bayliner Marine Corporation (Respondent)
INDEXED AS: BAYLINER MARINE CORP. V. DORAL BOATS LTD. (F.C.A.)
Court of Appeal, Urie, Mahoney and Stone JJ.— Toronto, May 13; Ottawa, June 13, 1986.
Copyright — Infringement — Appeal from trial judgment finding copyright infringement of Bayliner's plans for run about boat — Doral manufacturing boats by using stripped superstructure and hull of Bayliner's boats to make plugs, avoiding design process — Plans not subject of copyright — Designs "capable of being registered" under Industrial Design Act within meaning of Copyright Act, s. 46 — Copyright Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. C-30, ss. 2, 3, 4, 5, 46, Schedule II, Schedule III, art. 2.
Industrial design — Plans for hull and deck of boat design registrable under Industrial Design Act, within meaning of Copyright Act, s. 46 and not excluded from operation by Industrial Designs Rules, s. 11 — Test for registrability of design from Cimon Ltd. et al. v. Bench Made Furniture Corpn. et al.: design to be "applied" to "ornamenting" of article — Details of shape, distinguishing one pleasure boat from another, ornamental — Industrial Design Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. I-8, s. 14(1) — Industrial Designs Rules, C.R.C., c. 964, R. 11(1),(2) — Copyright Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. C-30, s. 46.
Construction of statutes — Industrial Designs Rules, s. 11(1)(a) — Trial Judge following Royal Doulton Tableware Limited v. Cassidy's Ltd., which interpreted "and" at end of s. 11(1)(a) conjunctively — "And" may be interpreted conjunc- tively or disjunctively — "And" here intended to link joint and several notions — Royal Doulton case overruled — Appeal allowed — Trial Judge erred in construing s. 11 as excluding application of Copyright Act, s. 46 — Industrial Designs Rules, C.R.C., c. 964, R. 11.
This is an appeal and cross-appeal from a judgment of the Trial Division finding that Dorat had infringed Bayliner's copyright in the plans for a runabout boat. Dorai avoided the costly design process by making plugs from one of Bayliner's stripped down boats. Section 46 of the Copyright Act precludes the Act from operating with respect to designs capable of
registration under the Industrial Design Act, except for designs that are not intended to be models to be multiplied by an industrial process. Subsection 11(1) of the Industrial Designs Rules provides that a design shall be deemed to be used as a model for multiplication by industrial process where (a) it is intended to be reproduced in more than 50 single articles, unless all the articles together form a single set; and (b) where the design is to be applied to paper hangings, carpets, textiles and lace. The Trial Judge followed the Royal Doulton case which construed the "and" at the end of paragraph 11(1)(a) as conjunctive. He found that subsection 11(1) of the Rules excluded the operation of section 46 of the Copyright Act. The issue here is whether Bayliner's plans are protected by copy right under section 46.
Held, the appeal should be allowed.
In the Royal Doulton case, the Trial Judge construed the "and" at the end of paragraph 11(1)(b) of the Rules in a disjunctive sense. The commonality of the items in paragraph 11(1)(b) is that each is a product to which the same design is applied repeatedly. The "and" at the end of paragraph 11(1)(a) has to be construed in the same sense, in order to carry out the intention of the legislation. As was pointed out in the Jeffrey Rogers Knitwear case, if a design must meet all the criteria in paragraphs 11(1)(a) and (b), then no design can qualify for registration under the Industrial Design Act.
The respondent intended to produce many more than 50 boats. Thus the boats are made by an industrial process. The Trial Judge erred in finding that subsection 11(1) of the Rules excluded the application of section 46 of the Copyright Act. A question remains as to whether the designs are capable of being registered under the Industrial Design Act. It was argued that the drawings did not have the degree of novelty required of a design, and that even if they were designs they were not registrable because they were primarily functional. If the subject-matter of the claimed copyright is a design within the meaning of Industrial Design Act, it is subject of section 46 of the Copyright Act as something "capable of being registered" under the Industrial Design Act and therefore not subject to copyright. According to Cimon Ltd. et al. v. Bench Made Furniture Corpn. et al., "the sort of design that can be regis tered is therefore a design to be `applied' to 'the ornamenting' of an article". The general shape of the hull and superstructure of a pleasure boat may be largely dictated by functional requirements, but the details of that shape which distinguish the appearance of one runabout from another are essentially ornamental. Those details, are what make one runabout more attractive than another. The designs disclosed by the plans in issue are capable of being registered under the Industrial Design Act within the meaning of section 46 of the Copyright Act and are not excluded from the operation of that provision
by section 11 of the Industrial Designs Rules. The plans themselves are not, therefore, subject of copyright.
CASES JUDICIALLY CONSIDERED
OVERRULED:
Royal Doulton Tableware Limited v. Cassidy's Ltd.,
[1986] 1 F.C. 357; (1984), 1 C.P.R. (3d) 214 (T.D.).
APPLIED:
Jeffrey Rogers Knitwear Productions Limited v. R.D. International Style Collections Ltd., [1985] 2 F.C. 220; 6 C.P.R. (3d) 409 (T.D.); Cimon Ltd. et al. v. Bench Made Furniture Corpn. et al., [1965] 1 Ex.C.R. 811.
DISTINGUISHED:
British Leyland et al. v. Armstrong Patents et al., judg ment dated February 27, 1986, House of Lords, not yet reported.
CONSIDERED:
Eldon Industries Inc. v. Reliable Toy Co. Ltd. (1965), 48 C.P.R. 109 (Ont. C.A.); affg. (1964), 44 C.P.R. 239 (Ont. H.C.); Vidal c. Artro Inc., [1976] C.S. 1155 (Que.).
REFERRED TO:
Interlego AG et al. v. Irwin Toy Ltd. et al. (1985), 3 C.P.R. (3d) 476 (F.C.T.D.).
COUNSEL:
Robert H. Barrigar, Q.C. and Kenneth E. Sharpe for appellant.
Roger T. Hughes, Q.C. and Kenneth D. McKay for respondent.
SOLICITORS:
Barrigar & Oyen, Ottawa, for appellant. Sim, Hughes, Toronto, for respondent.
The following are the reasons for judgment rendered in English by
MAHONEY J.: This is an appeal and a cross- appeal from a judgment of the Trial Division, [1986] 3 F.C. 346; (1985), 5 C.P.R. (3d) 289, which found that the appellant, hereinafter "Dor- al", had infringed the copyright of the respondent, hereinafter "Bayliner", in the plans for the fibre glass hull and deck of one boat and had not infringed the copyright in the plans for another.
The boat, the copyright in whose plans were found to have been infringed, is a runabout approximate ly 16 1 / 2 feet in length. That, the copyright in whose plans were found not to have been infringed, is a cabin cruiser about 24 1 / 2 feet long. The learned Trial Judge made the following findings of fact [at pages 352-353 and 373 F.C.; 292-293 and 317 C.P.R.] as to the preparation and use of Bayliner's plans and the alleged acts of infringement of the copyright in them.
Designers at Bayliner first prepare design drawings of the hull section and deck or superstructure sections separately. Because of the curved tapered configuration of boats, in the hull sections especially, a number of measurements appear on tables on the plans giving coordinates at perhaps one and one half foot intervals from bow to stern. These drawings are used to produce what is called a plug which is a three dimensional rendering of the boat to be constructed and prepared from the drawing. A mould is then made from the plug and in manufac turing the boat fibreglass mat of the colour desired is first laid down in the mould. Fibreglass is then inserted either mechani cally or by hand to the desired thickness and this creates the hull of the boat. The same applies to the superstructure mould which of course has to fit on to the hull when the boat is assembled. The plaintiff produced four drawings, namely the hull and deck section of each boat, and a fifth drawing since the hull for the 2450 Ciera was a modification of an earlier design of the plaintiff for which the drawing was also produced.
The defendant frankly admits that it produces its boats without the use of any engineering design, nor does it have an engineering design department as such. It purchased a 1650 Capri and stripped it down taking the superstructure and hull sections apart and using these to make the plug for its boats. The same thing was done to the plaintiffs 2450 Ciera. This practice ... short circuits the costly design process, as no engineering drawings have to be made nor a plug from them, as the plugs are made from the plaintiffs own boats with the alterations made on them.
My conclusions of fact are based on a full consideration of all the evidence including details of comparisons which of necessity have been omitted from these reasons. On this basis I conclude that the defendant made sufficient differences in the Citation that it does not infringe the plaintiff's copyright in the 2450 Ciera. In the case of the TRX however I have reached the opposite conclusion. The differences from the 1650 Capri are relatively minor and insignificant. While they may be notice able to an expert and even perhaps to an experienced dealer, an average customer would see no significant differences except
with respect to finishing and equipment which is not protected by copyright.
Dorai now appeals against the finding that it had infringed the copyright in the runabout's drawings. Bayliner cross-appeals the finding of non-infringement of the copyright in the cruiser's drawings and also the Trial Judge's refusal of certain remedies. It no longer asserts a claim for exemplary or punitive damages. It does, however, say that the learned Trial Judge erred in refusing to order the delivery up of the infringing runabouts and the runabout plugs and moulds, in refusing it damages for conversion, in limiting its entitlement to damages or an accounting of profits to those arising after it had notified Dorai of the existence of its plans and its claim to copyright in them and, finally, in not awarding it both damages and an accounting of profits rather than putting it to its election.
I was not persuaded by either party that the learned Trial Judge had erred in his findings of fact. They were open to him on evidence he was entirely entitled to accept. It follows that Doral's appeal on the ground that the learned Trial Judge erred in finding as a matter of fact that its run about infringed the copyright in the runabout plans fails. Likewise, the cross-appeal on the find ing that Doral's cruiser did not infringe the copy right in the cruiser plans also fails. What remains, along with the cross-appeal as to remedies, is the appeal on the grounds that: (a) Bayliner's plans are not protected by copyright by virtue of section 46 of the Copyright Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. C-30, and (b) as a matter of law, the copyright in a plan is not infringed by the making of a copy of the object made according to the plan.
The learned Trial Judge disposed of the first of these arguments on the basis of judicial comity. He considered it proper to follow another recent Trial Division decision, Royal Doulton Tableware Limited v. Cassidy's Ltd., [1986] 1 F.C. 357;
(1984), 1 C.P.R. (3d) 214. An appreciation of the argument requires a fairly extensive reference to the legislative scheme.
Article 2 of The Rome Copyright Convention, 1928, which is Schedule III to the Copyright Act, by virtue of section 51, contains two pertinent provisions.
(1) The term "literary and artistic works" shall include every production in the literary, scientific and artistic domain, what ever may be the mode or form of its expression, such as ... illustrations, geographical charts, plans, sketches, and plastic works relative to geography, topography, architecture or science.
(4) Works of art applied to industrial purposes shall be protected so far as the domestic legislation of each country allows.
The foregoing provisions appear identical to those of Schedule II to the Act, referred to in section 47, the Revised Berne Convention, 1886. Canada has adhered to those Conventions and given effect to the particular provisions in the following legisla tion.
The Copyright Act provides:
2. In this Act
"literary work" includes maps, charts, plans, tables, and compilations;
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 ....
4. (1) Subject to this Act, copyright shall subsist in Canada for the term hereinafter mentioned, in every original literary, dramatic, musical and artistic work ....
5. The term for which copyright shall subsist shall, except as otherwise expressly provided by this Act, be the life of the author and a period of fifty years after his death.
46. (1) This Act does not apply to designs capable of being registered under the Industrial Design Act, except designs that, though capable of being so registered, are not used or intended to be used as models or patterns to be multiplied by any industrial process.
(2) General rules, under the Industrial Design Act, may be made for determining the conditions under which a design shall be deemed to be used for such purposes as aforesaid.
The Industrial Design Act, R.S.C. 1970, c. I - 8, provides a maximum ten-year monopoly in a design to its author in contrast to the lifetime-plus- 50-year monopoly provided under the Copyright Act. With reference to section 46 of the Copyright Act, section 11 of the Industrial Designs Rules, C.R.C., c. 964, has been made, whereof subsec tions (1) and (2) are pertinent.
11. (1) A design shall be deemed to be used as a model or pattern to be multiplied by any industrial process within the meaning of section 46 of the Copyright Act,
(a) where the design is reproduced or is intended to be reproduced in more than 50 single articles, unless all the articles in which the design is reproduced or is intended to be reproduced together form only a single set as defined in subsection 2; and
(b) where the design is to be applied to
(i) printed paper hangings,
(ii) carpets, floor cloths, or oil cloths manufactured or sold in lengths or pieces,
(iii) textile piece goods, or textile goods manufactured or sold in lengths or pieces, and
(iv) lace, not made by hand.
(2) For the purposes of this section, "set" means a number of articles of the same general character ordinarily on sale to gether, or intended to be used together, all bearing the same design with or without modification not sufficient to alter the character or not substantially affecting the identity thereof.
Royal Doulton v. Cassidy's dealt with a floral pattern applied to china by an industrial process. The learned Trial Judge held [at pages 379 F.C.; 231 C.P.R.], among other things, that:
By Rule 11 [Industrial Designs Rules, C.R.C., c. 964] of the rules made under the Industrial Design Act, it is clear that to be deemed to be so used for multiplication by an industrial process, the design must be reproduced in more than 50 single articles (admittedly the case here) and must be applied to certain kinds of materials therein specified such as paper hangings, carpets, textiles, or lace. There is no mention of porcelain or china. Therefore, it is clear that a design for application to china tableware is not a design deemed to be intended for multiplication by an industrial process and there fore is not excepted from the protection of the Copyright Act by subsection 46(1) thereof.
He went on to declare that one of the plaintiffs was owner of copyright in the floral design. The same Trial Judge reiterated his interpretation of
section 11 in Interlego AG et al. v. Irwin Toy Ltd. et al. (1985), 3 C.P.R. (3d) 476 (F.C.T.D.), at page 486. In neither case did he refer to earlier decisions which had applied section 46 of the Copyright Act nor, with respect, did he record the analysis, if any, of regulation 11 that led him to a result inconsistent with the earlier decisions.
I subscribe to the school that says "and" does not mean "or" nor does "or" mean "and". I cannot express my opinion better than to adopt the anal ysis of E. A. Driedger in Construction of Statutes, Second Edition (Toronto: Butterworths, 1983), pages 15 and 16. "And" is a semantically ambig uous conjunction. The notions which it links may be intended to be regarded jointly or jointly and severally.
It will be noted that, in the Royal Doulton case, the Trial Judge plainly construed the "and" at the end of subparagraph 11(1) (b) (iii) as linking items to be treated severally as well as jointly. He para phrased paragraph 11(1)(b) [at pages 379 F.C.; 231 C.P.R.] as listing "paper hangings, carpets, textiles or lace". [My emphasis.] In my respectful opinion the "and" at the end of paragraph 11(1)(a) was likewise intended to link joint and several notions, not only joint notions. The com- monality of the items comprised in paragraph 11(1)(b) is that each is a product to which the same design is ordinarily applied repeatedly. The "and" at the end of paragraph 11(1) (a) has to be construed in the same sense in joining those items with "a single set" as with "more than 50 single articles". Whatever one's view of the concept of more than 50 single articles jointly with some of the items of paragraph 11(1) (b), the concept of a single set of most, if not all, of them is utterly alien.
In Eldon Industries Inc. v. Reliable Toy Co. Ltd. (1965), 48 C.P.R. 109, the Ontario Court of Appeal accepted that the design of a toy truck was not amenable to copyright by reason of section 46. In Vidal c. Artro Inc., [1976] C.S. 1155, the
Quebec Superior Court came to the same conclu sion as to the design of mass produced "works of art" made of tin. Neither judgment, nor that of the Trial Judge in the Eldon case, (1964), 44 C.P.R. 239 (Ont. H.C.), directed itself to section 11 of the Rules. The only other pertinent Canadi- an decision is an even more recent judgment of the Trial Division, Jeffrey Rogers Knitwear Produc tions Limited v. R.D. International Style Collec tions Ltd., [1985] 2 F.C. 220; 6 C.P.R. (3d) 409, dealing with a sweater design, which reluctantly followed the decision under appeal and that which it had followed. The reluctance was expressed, at pages 225-226 F.C.; 413 C.P.R., in the following terms:
With the benefit of the arguments that I heard, I would be inclined to differ, with respect, from my two esteemed col leagues on the construction of Rule 11(1). It would appear to me that if a design must meet all the criteria in paragraph 11(1)(a) and in paragraph 11(1)(b) so as to be deemed to be a pattern to be multiplied by an industrial process, then no design can possibly qualify and therefore no design would have to be registered under the Industrial Design Act. In other words, I cannot see how a design can be reproduced in more than 50 articles and be applied as well to paper hangings, carpets, textile piece goods and lace not made by hand. Such an interpretation of the Rule would effectively bar any and all registrations under the Industrial Design Act. That cannot have been the intention of Parliament.
Of course, normally, "and" is conjunctive, "or" is disjunc- tive, but to carry out the intention of the legislation it is at times necessary to read "and" as being disjunctive. (The Inter pretation of Statutes, 12th ed. (London: Sweet & Maxwell, 1969), pp. 232-233.) Rule 11(1) is a deeming provision. As such, it lists all the conditions under which a design is deemed to be used as a pattern that is capable of being registered under the Industrial Design Act: they are condition (1)(a) and (or) condition (1)(b)(i), (ii), (iii), and (or) (iv). In my view, a design under any of those conditions is capable of being registered.
I find myself in substantial agreement with that reasoning and in complete agreement with the conclusion.
The evidence is clear that the respondent intend ed to produce many more than 50 boats according to the plans for each. The Trial Judge found as a
fact that the respondent's boats are made by an industrial process.
In my opinion, the learned Trial Judge erred in law in construing subsection 11(1) of the Industri al Designs Rules so as to exclude the application of section 46 of the Copyright Act in the present case. That is not, however, the end of the matter. The question remains whether the plans in issue are "designs capable of being registered under the Industrial Design Act" as required by section 46.
The respondent says that the expression "capable of being registered" in subsection 46(1) is to be construed as "registrable". The Trial Judge records its arguing [at pages 362 F.C.; 300-301 C.P.R.] at trial that:
... its drawings, moulds, plugs and boats are not capable of industrial design protection in Canada because they do not possess the degree of novelty required of a design.
It also argued that, even if they were designs, they were not registrable because they were primarily functional and, in any event, were excluded from registration by effluxion of time. Subsection 14(1) of the Industrial Design Act requires that its registration be effected within one year of a design's publication in Canada.
Leaving aside the argument based on effluxion of time, if the respondent's interpretation is right, the exclusion of section 46 applies only to designs which, if presented for registration, would have been registered. This will require the reading of the mind of the Commissioner of Patents in cir cumstances upon which he has not pronounced. It will present a party invoking the exclusion with the potentially impossible burden of proving novelty having regard to all the designs previously regis tered. Assuming the burden were discharged, the totally unreasonable result will be that a design that is sufficiently novel to have been registered will be excluded from copyright protection while one lacking that novelty will be subject of copy right. As to timely registration, can Parliament have intended that a person who diligently regis-
ters a design is entitled to, at most, a ten-year monopoly, while one who neglects or deliberately omits to apply for registration is entitled to a monopoly for the life of its author plus 50 years? To ask the question is to answer it.
The only question to be considered is whether the subject-matter of the claimed copyright is a design within the meaning of the Industrial Design Act. If it is, it is subject of section 46 of the Copyright Act as something capable of being reg istered under the Industrial Design Act.
"Design" is not a term defined by any relevant Canadian legislation. The locus classicus is the decision of Jackett P., considering a sofa, in Cimon Ltd. et al. v. Bench Made Furniture Corpn. et al., [1965] 1 Ex.C.R. 811, in which he held, at pages 831 and 832-833:
The sort of design that can be registered is therefore a design to be "applied" to "the ornamenting" of an article. It must therefore be something that determines the appearance of an article, or some part of an article, because ornamenting relates to appearance. And it must have as its objective making the appearance of an article more attractive because that is the purpose of ornamenting. It cannot be something that deter mines the nature of an article as such (as opposed to mere appearance) and it cannot be something that determines how an article is to be created. In other words, it cannot create a monopoly in "a product" or "a process" such as can be acquired by a patent for an invention. There is, moreover, nothing in the legislation that limits the type of design that may be registered (as was suggested in argument) to those providing for something that is applied to an article after the article comes into existence.
The fact that a design relates to shape or configuration of an article is not, in itself, an objection to its registration. As long as it is a design to be applied "to the ornamenting" of an article, it is eligible for registration even though it requires that its purpose of "ornamenting" be accomplished in whole or in part by constructing the article, or parts of it, in a certain shape or shapes.
In my view, the functional requirements of the hull and superstructure of a pleasure boat is that they provide a buoyant platform within and upon which the essentials and amenities required by its operator may be installed. The general shape may be largely dictated by functional considerations;
however, the details of that shape which serve to distinguish the appearance of, for example, one 16 1 / 2 foot runabout from another are essentially ornamental. Those details are what make one run about more attractive, in the eyes of the beholder, than another. The foregoing conclusions of fact were not found by the Trial Judge. He did not have to deal with this issue in view of his conclu sion as to section 46. However, they are amply supported by the uncontradicted evidence of wit nesses for both parties. Vid. Transcript, Vol. I, pages 127, lines 13 to 128, 13; 137, 3 to 16; Vol. II, pages 200, 18 to 201, 10; 318, 25 to 326, 29; Vol. IV, pages 605, 12 to 607, 17.
It is, I think, pertinent to observe that this case is concerned with the statutory monopoly accorded by the Copyright Act. It is not concerned with unfair competition or issues of commercial morality.
The designs disclosed by the plans in issue are, in my opinion, designs capable of being registered under the Industrial Design Act within the mean ing of section 46 of the Copyright Act and are not excluded from the operation of that provision by section 11 of the Industrial Designs Rules. The plans themselves are not, therefore, subject of copyright.
Having come to that conclusion, I do not find it necessary to deal with the remaining issue in the appeal: whether as a matter of law the copyright in a plan is infringed by the making of a copy of an object made according to the plan. The importance of this matter is well illustrated by the several speeches of the Law Lords in their as yet unreport- ed decision in British Leyland et al. v. Armstrong Patents et al., judgment rendered February 27, 1986. That case dealt with the copyright in plans for automobile mufflers found to have been copied in much the same way as the boat plans in this case. Pertinent British and Canadian legislation are very different in their material particulars. However, in the nature of mufflers, as they are not ordinarily exposed to public view, ornamentation
was not a factor and the parallel exclusion from copyright protection was not in play. I am con vinced that it would be especially unwise to express an opinion on this remaining issue by way of obiter dicta. It is equally unnecessary to deal with the cross-appeal as to remedies. In declining to deal with these matters, I indicate neither approval nor disapproval of the results reached by the learned Trial Judge.
I would allow the appeal with costs here and in the Trial Division and set aside the judgment below. I would dismiss the cross-appeal with costs.
URIE J.: I agree. STONE J.: I agree.
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