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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> IPC Media Ltd v Highbury-Leisure Publishing Ltd [2004] EWHC 2985 (Ch) (21 December 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2004/2985.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 2985 (Ch), [2005] FSR 20 |
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CHANCERY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
IPC MEDIA LIMITED |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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HIGHBURY - LEISURE PUBLISHING LIMITED |
Defendant |
____________________
Mr James Mellor and Miss Jessie Bowhill (instructed by Wedlake Bell for the Defendant)
Hearing dates: 5 8, 11 15 and 18 - 22 October, 2004
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Laddie:
"It is stretching the original use of the word "format" a long way to use it metaphorically to describe the features of a television series such as a talent, quiz or game show which is presented in a particular way, with repeated but unconnected use of set phrases and with the aid of particular accessories. Alternative terms suggested in the course of argument were "structure" or "package". This difficulty in finding an appropriate term to describe the nature of the "work" in which the copyright subsists reflects the difficulty of the concept that a number of allegedly distinctive features of a television series can be isolated from the changing material presented in each separate performance (the acts of the performers in the talent show, the question and answers in the quiz show etc.) and identified as an "original dramatic work". No case was cited to their Lordships in which copyright of the kind claimed had been established.
The protection which copyright gives creates a monopoly and 'there must be certainty in the subject matter of such monopoly in order to avoid injustice to the rest of the world:' Tate v Fulbrook [1908] 1 KB 821, per Farwell J at page 832. The subject matter of the copyright claimed for the "dramatic format" of "Opportunity Knocks" is conspicuously lacking in certainty." (p 702)
"The reproduction of a part which by itself has no originality will not normally be a substantial part of the copyright and therefore will not be protected. For that which would not attract copyright except by reason of its collocation will, when robbed of that collocation, not be a substantial part of the copyright and therefore the courts will not hold its reproduction to be an infringement. It is this, I think, which is meant by one or two judicial observations that "there is no copyright" in some unoriginal part of a whole that is copyright". (p 293)
This is of particular significance where the author's artistic work was created by blending together known design features. It may well be that the skill and effort involved in that blending operation is sufficient to justify copyright protection. But in such a case, copying one or two of the individual features may not amount to the taking of a substantial part of the copyright work. Each case will depend on its own facts.
"Upon any work, and especially upon a play, a great number of patterns of increasing generality will fit equally well, as more and more of the incident is left out. The last may perhaps be no more than the most general statement of what the play is about, and at times may consist of only its title; but there is a point in this series of abstractions where they are no longer protected, since otherwise the playwright could prevent the use of his 'ideas', to which, apart from their expression, his property is never extended." (p 121)
"[C]ertain ideas expressed by a copyright work may not be protected because, although they are ideas of a literary, dramatic or artistic nature, they are not original, or so commonplace as not to form a substantial part of the work. Kenrick & Co v Lawrence & Co (1890) 25 QBD 99, is a well-known example. It is on this ground that the mere notion of combining stripes and flowers would not have amounted to a substantial part of the plaintiff's work. At that level of abstraction, the idea, though expressed in the design, would not have represented sufficient of the author's skill and labour as to attract copyright protection.
Generally speaking, in cases of artistic copyright, the more abstract and simple the copied idea, the less likely it is to constitute a substantial part. Originality, in the sense of the contribution of the author's skill and labour, tends to lie in the detail with which the basic idea is presented." (pp 121- 122)
"A typeface is a collection of letters, numerals and symbols designed by a typographer. For example, [the original of my report was] set in Garamond, which was developed by Claude Garamond in the early 1600s in France. (He was the first trade typefounder. By the mid-1600s, the Garamond letter had ousted the pre-existing Venetian design from favour and his original design was being emulated by printers all over Europe). A typeface, or type family, may have several fonts in it. A font is an assortment of, or set of, type all of one size and style, ie, Garamond has a Roman font, a bold font, an italic font and a bold italic font all these also come in capitals and lower case. Some typefaces may have many more fonts than these basic ones. There are approximately 6000 readily available typefaces; new ones are being designed every day.
Some typefaces are belong to serif genre, below left, and some are sans style, below right.
Serifs are the short lines stemming from or at an angle to the upper and lower ends of the strokes of a letter.
The size of a piece of type, or printed letter, is determined by "point size". Point size is still based on an Imperial unit of measurement, ie, one inch measures 72 points."
"15.7 'Dingbats' is one of the names given to the small symbols used as eye-catchers in conjunction with text and small headlines. Sometimes known as bullets, these small symbols are often supplied in the form of a complete type font, with the different characters associated to different keystrokes on a standard computer keyboard.
15.8 One of the most commonplace fonts is Zapf Dingbats, designed by type designer Herman Zapf in 1978. A complete character set appears below:
15.9 There are six similar fonts available in the current Faces type suppliers catalogue, and many more globally."
The Claim
"5. The claim herein concerns, in particular, the design, subject matter, theme and presentational style of the following covers and features of Ideal Home, which appeared in the editions identified:
(a) the front cover (January 1999 to August 2002)
(b) a decorating feature under the name "Find your perfect home style" (March 2001 to August 2001); this evolved from a feature originally called "Plan the perfect colour scheme" (January 1999 onwards);
(c) a pair of decorating features under the names "IH Style File; Five looks for kitchens" and "IH Style File; Five looks for bathrooms" (November 2001 to August 2002); this evolved from a pair of features in alternate monthly editions featuring 3 bathrooms and 3 kitchens, the first of which was "Fabulous New Kitchen Looks" (January 1999 onwards);
(d) a buyer's guide feature under the name "Choose the Best" (February 2002 to August 2002); this evolved from a feature originally called "Choose the best fridge and freezer" (January 1999 onwards);
(e) a buyer's guide feature in a format which, in the March 2002 edition of Ideal Home, is called "16 family-friendly sofas" (August 2001 to August 2002); this evolved from a feature originally called "Choose the perfect sofa whatever your budget" (March 1999 onwards);
(f) a reader's question and answer feature under the name "Solve your Home Problems" (February 2002 to August 2002); this evolved from a feature originally in the March 1999 edition.
Copies of the aforesaid front covers and features are served with these Amended Particulars of Claim.
6. Each of the said covers and features constituted or comprised original literary and/or artistic works. The later covers and features in each sub-paragraph above substantially reproduced (Although sometimes with evolution thereof from edition to edition) the design, subject matter, theme and presentational style of the cover or feature in the respective earliest edition listed there, whilst being original in the text and photographs included therein."
"3. At all material times the Claimant has sought to maintain a consistently high standard of design, layout and content in each edition of Ideal Home. Each edition of Ideal Home comprises (1) a front cover, (2) a number of "features" as listed below, (3) other editorial matter, and (4) advertising. The design, subject matter, theme and presentational style of the front cover and of the said features usually remains consistent from edition to edition through a number of editions, although the specific texts and/or photographs used on the cover and in each feature will vary.
7. The design, subject matter, theme and presentational style of the said series of covers and of each of the said series of features constituted a substantial part of the original works mentioned in paragraph 6 above, such that the reproduction thereof in conjunction with substituted text and photographs is capable of amounting to the infringement of copyright therein. Such design, subject matter, theme and presentational style of the said series of covers and of each of the said series of features is hereafter referred to as the "Design Elements" thereof."
"this evolved from a feature originally called "Plan the perfect colour scheme" (January 1999 onwards);"
"6A. With regard to sub-paragraphs 5(b) to (f) inclusive, the Claimant primarily relies upon the series of editions first pleaded, the first of which was an occasion upon which a new or significantly altered design was adopted. The Claimant relies upon the earlier editions from which each of the features was evolved: (1) in order, to the extent that the design, subject matter, theme and presentational style of the primary pleaded features is not original by reason of having been copied from such earlier editions, to rely upon the copyright in the features in those earlier editions; and (2) to the extent that the Defendant may assert that any details in its editions hereafter complained of were included in previous editions of Home which pre-dated the primary pleaded features, to contend that those details were copied from those earlier editions of Ideal Home."
"6B. In respect of the covers and each of the said features identified in paragraph 5 above, progressive evolution of the design, subject matter, theme and presentational style took place from edition to edition. In relation to the cover, significant changes occurred in the November 2001 edition. For the avoidance of doubt, the Claimant relies herein upon the relevant design, subject matter, theme and presentational style both in the earliest primary pleaded edition in each sub-paragraph of paragraph 5 above, and as it evolved in the later editions pleaded therein; it also relies upon the features from which they evolved in the manner indicated in paragraph 6A."
The allegation of copying.
"15. In about September 2001 the Defendant began to copy aspects of the design, subject matter, theme and presentational style of Ideal Home in its Home magazine. This followed an earlier period from about mid-1999 onwards where the Defendant had copied certain elements (identified in Annex G) of the Ideal Home front cover, in particular its use of numbers, but had ceased to do so by the August 2001 edition of Home. From September 2001, the degree of copying became more extensive and obvious in subsequent editions of Home and, in particular, in the May, June, July and August 2002 editions thereof ("the Infringing Magazines"). Copies of the Infringing Magazines are attached hereto in Annex C. For purposes of comparison, a copy of the August 2001 edition of Home, which exhibits the magazine's original format (that is to say, before any apparent copying of the design, subject matter, theme and presentational style of Ideal Home), is attached hereto in Annex D."
"Pending disclosure and/or further information the Claimant is unaware of the full extent of the evidence of the Defendant's copying, but will rely at trial upon all facts and matters of which it becomes aware. In the interim the Claimant will rely upon the following:"
Expert Witnesses
"Each party may call one expert witness in this action from the field of magazine design to address the following issues:-
(i) the significance or otherwise of the design features in issue of the respective magazines and similarities between such design features having regard to the design conventions and practice in the magazine industry; and
(ii) the process by which magazines are designed.
With particular reference to the field of home interest magazines from 1997 to 2002."
"That no publisher, editor or designer would set out to copy another's design, subject matter, theme and presentational style of an established magazine. It has been known for large publishers deliberately to run "spoilers" to see off newcomers. In such a case designers would have been asked to make direct copies of certain design features."
The Covers
Magazine Cover Design Features relied on |
(1)(a) title printed in shadowed Rotis Sans Serif (Bastardised) font directly upon a full page bleed photograph; (1)(b) the title is underlined by a strap-line written in lettering upon a reversed out box; (1)(c) the wording of the strap-line in Ideal Home, namely "Britain's best-selling decorating magazine" is very similar to that of the strap-line in Home, namely "the UK's best home-interest magazine"; (1)(d) the "hot spot" is dominated by a large number written in very large numerals (one numeral of which is always in a larger font size than the other two) typically in the same colour as the title, adjacent to which is a descriptive phrase printed in letters of a contrasting colour and in Tranquillity Roman font; (1)(e) immediately below the "hot spot" an eye catching word or phrase is presented in white letters upon a reversed out box of a striking colour (usually matching that of the title), under which is text in Stone Sans font; (1)(f) to the right of the "hot spot" is set out a list of four lines of text together with numbers. In each case the text is set in a font which looks like Stone Sans and the numbers thereof appear in a contrasting colour and/or a larger font. [NB May 02 does not have numbers in larger or contrasting font; July 02 has only two numbers]. the said numbers are not arranged in a neat vertical line but in an irregular but generally vertical line (except May 02). (1)(g) text appears across the bottom quarter of the cover. (1)(g) text across bottom is written in three (occasionally four) lines, in Tranquillity Roman and Stone Sans font, with the lower two lines (occasionally just the lowest one) being written in a larger font; (1)(h) text listed at the bottom edge of the page, highlighted by bullet points in the shape of coloured diamonds with concave edges; (1)(j) For March 02 edition of Ideal Home and May 02 edition of Home: overall use of pinks and beiges in the context of a brightly lit living room central pale beige/off white item of soft furniture (a sofa in Ideal Home and an armchair in Home), accessorised by contrasting pink cushions Bright lighting being provided by floor to ceiling windows set behind and slightly to the left of the central piece of furniture Central piece of furniture being contrasted by an edge of frame chair in a striking purple colour (1)(k) for June 02 edition of Ideal Home and August 02 edition of Home: very similar use of yellows and dark pink/purples in the context of a brightly lit living room central item of furniture being a two seater sofa, accessorised by contrasting dark pink/purple cushions the lighting being provided by floor to ceiling windows set next to, and slightly in front of, the said sofas (from the perspective of a person sitting on the said sofas) the said window is framed by floor to ceiling curtains made of a yellow material featuring a floral motif a yellow armchair, accessorised by red and yellow cushions, is positioned in front of the said window the opposite side of the cover to the said sofa features a vase of reddish pink flowers placed in front of the said window each cover features, on the opposite side to the said sofa, a coffee table positioned upon a rectangular rug to the left of each said window is positioned a free standing lamp bearing a simple white shade in the shape of a truncated cone T1/2616 Use of beige armchairs T1/2624-25 Sofa and little coffee table with similar colours T1/3523-24 Style of photographs is looking into a furnished room The use of similar typography for elements 1(a), (b), (d), (e), (f) [except May 02], (g) and the coverlines generally, as for the equivalent text in Ideal Home. In the case of the coverlines, this includes the use of coverlines with multiple text sizes (e.g. compare Ideal Home March 02 (Y8) "Brilliant ideas for every room" with Home July 02 (Z16) "New ideas to copy" wording of this text is not alleged to infringe). The use of stamp-type devices at a particular, slight angle (e.g. "Ideas for every room" on Home May 02 (Y14) wording of these stamp devices not alleged to infringe). |
(i) The Logo
"Q. If we turn to the "Home" logo, the underline extends across the full width of the logo, does it not?
A. Yes.
Q. It obviously forms part of it because it is always in the same colour as the logo, is it not?
A. That is right.
Q. I think the designer of this, Mr. Powell, says that if you have those letters "H-O-M-E" on a full bleed photo there is a tendency for the letters to float. You understand what he means by "float"?
A. Yes, I do.
Q. The purpose of putting this underline in there was to anchor the logo, to stop it floating. That is a sensible credible explanation, is it not?
A. Yes.
Q. That is good design work, is it not?
A. It is what we call bog standard design work, yes.
Q. If you please, but it is good design work, is it not?
A. It is a basic idea, yes.
Q. But it is good execution, is it not?
A. It is well executed, it is well balanced.
Q. I would suggest that underline is nothing like in design terms the Ideal Home underline. Do you agree?
A. Yes, of course." (Transcript Day 7 page 840)
"Q. Is it your evidence that we should either ignore or leave on one side the fact that at Home they had been using large coloured la Gioconda for their titles for three years with sans standfirst and the captions style that we have seen, we should leave all that out of account and say "no, they must have copied that from Ideal Home"?
A. I think it is the overall combination that has come to together that has produced the effect of copying. It is not the individual items. Mr. Crozier and I agreed very early on that individual items such as coloured type and captions styling and sans-serif are bog standard. It is just the way that they have come together in the issues that are in dispute that led me to believe that there had been some influence from Ideal Home." (Transcript Day 7 page 787).
(ii) The wording of the strapline
"the wording of the strap-line in Ideal Home, namely 'Britain's best-selling decorating magazine' is very similar to that of the strap-line in Home, namely 'the UK's best home-interest magazine'"
"93. I remember being annoyed by the Home cover as I felt that the strap-line 'Britain's best decorating magazine' was a direct attempt to run on the back of Ideal Home's 'The UK's best-selling decorating magazine'." (First witness statement paragraph 93)
"I believed that at the time it was taking elements of our strapline and misleading the consumer into believing it was the UK's best selling, it was replicating Ideal Home's strapline." (Transcript Day 5 page 543)
Magazine | Strapline | Date |
YOUR HOME | Britain's fastest growing home magazine | February 1999 |
HOMES & IDEAS | The No. 1 magazine for ideas | October 1998 onwards |
HOUSE BEAUTIFUL | Britain's best-selling home interest magazine | October 1998 |
HOUSE BEAUTIFUL | The top-selling homes & decorating magazine | November 1998 onwards |
HOUSE BEAUTIFUL | The UK's top-selling homes magazine | (December 1999 |
THE REAL HOMES MAGAZINE | The fastest growing homes magazine | May 2001 onwards |
GOOD HOUSEKEEPING | Britain's best-selling quality magazine | March 1996 |
(iii) The Hot Spot
"Each of the relevant covers of Ideal Home contains the following details, each of which is also present on each of the covers of the Infringing Magazines, in an identical or almost identical form:
d) the "hot spot" (being the name given to the area on the left hand side of the cover just below the title) is usually dominated by a large number written in very large numerals (one numeral of which from August 2001 Ideal Home onwards is always in a larger font size than the other two) typically in the same colour as the title, adjacent to which is a descriptive phrase printed in letters of a contrasting colour and in Tranquillity Roman font"
"In about September 2001 the Defendant began to copy aspects of the design, subject matter, theme and presentational style of Ideal Home in its Home magazine. This followed an earlier period from about mid-1999 onwards where the Defendant had copied certain elements (identified in Annex G) of the Ideal Home front cover, in particular its use of numbers, but had ceased to do so by the August 2001 edition of Home."
"For the purposes of the issues raised in this action, the "certain elements" referred to in the second sentence of paragraph 15 of the Amended Particulars of Claim which the Claimant relies on are set out in the table below. During the period referred to in that sentence, the same appeared on the front covers of the issues of Home indicated.
Element | Issue of Home | |
The use of a large number in the hotspot (see paragraph 21(1)(d) of the Amended Particulars of Claim) | July 1999, August 1999, September 2000, October 2000 |
(iv) The bottom quarter of the cover
"a summary of the theme or general content of the magazine appears across the bottom quarter of the cover. The text thereof is written in three (occasionally four) lines, in Tranquillity Roman and Stone Sans font, with the lower two lines (occasionally just the lowest one) being written in a larger font;
in nearly all cases other contents of the magazine are listed at the bottom edge of the page, highlighted by bullet points in the shape of diamonds (substituted with stars in the December 2001 Ideal Home Issue) usually with concave edges."
(a) There is text in the bottom quarter of the cover.
(b) The number of lines and the font used for them.
The only looks you'll want
Summer
decorating special
(v) Copying of the photographs on the front covers
(vi) Copying the hotspot from the April 2001 issue of IDEAL HOME.
"375 new ideas
for every room.
We love them so will you!"
and
"375 Fresh
new ideas
for every room
Looks you'll love:
Magazine | Date | Words/Numerals used |
YOUR HOME | Summer 1997 | 692 Bright ideas for every room |
YOUR HOME | February 1999 | 18 Real life home packed with ideas |
YOUR HOME | January 2000 | 283 Fresh ideas for Christmas 50 Brilliant ideas for the Bash of the Century |
YOUR HOME | January 2000 to January 2001 | Inspiration you'll love ideas you can use |
YOUR HOME | January 2001 | 427 Fresh and festive ideas for every room |
YOUR HOME | July 2001 | Big ideas for small rooms |
YOUR HOME | November 2001 | 329 Fresh ideas |
YOUR HOME | June 2002 | 45 New looks you'll love |
HOMES & IDEAS | January 1999 | 47 Brilliant bathroom ideas |
HOMES & IDEAS | February 1999 | 31 big ideas to transform small rooms |
HOMES & IDEAS | March to May 2000 | Creative looks for every room in every house |
HOMES & IDEAS | September to November 2000 | Inspiration for every room in your home |
HOMES & IDEAS | November 2000 | Instant facelifts for every room |
HOMES & IDEAS | December 2000 | Creative looks for every room in your home |
HOUSE BEAUTIFUL | November 1998 | 101 Ideas for kitchens, bathrooms & living areas |
HOUSE BEAUTIFUL | February 2002 | 32 Pages of style inspiration - looks you'll love for living rooms |
BBC GOOD HOMES | January 2001 | 201 Brilliant ides for your home Delicious colour schemes plumy looks you'll love |
BBC GOOD HOMES | April 2001 | 211 Fresh ideas for every room in the house |
BBC GOOD HOMES | May 2001 | New colours, styles and ideas for all your rooms |
BBC GOOD HOMES | June 2001 | 30 family-friendly floors you'll love |
BBC GOOD HOMES | September 2001 | 247 Beautiful new ideas for every room in your home |
BBC GOOD HOMES | October 2001 | 270 inspiring ideas guaranteed to transform your home |
BBC GOOD HOMES | October 2001 | The India influence livable looks you'll love |
BBC GOOD HOMES | November 2001 | 305 inspiring ideas for every room and every budget |
LIVING ETC | January 2000 | 500 + genius ideas for every room |
LIVING ETC | January 2001 | 500 + beautiful ideas for every room |
PERFECT HOME | January 2002` | Cosy living real homes you'll love |
PERFECT HOME | January 2002 | 259 ideas for the best ever Christmas |
HOME FLAIR | February 1999 | 99 Fantastic ideas for the kitchen and bathroom |
Most of these are located in the hotspot.
ANNEX I
Cover of February 2002 issue of IDEAL HOME
ANNEX II
(One of accused covers and a selection of the covers it is said to be copied from)
ANNEX III
Cover of August 2002 issue of HOME
(Alleged to infringe)
ANNEX IV
Cover of June 2002 issue of IDEAL HOME
ANNEX V
Cover of May 2002 issue of HOME
(Alleged to infringe)
ANNEX VI
Cover of June 2002 issue of HOME
(Alleged to infringe)
ANNEX VII
Cover of July 2002 issue of HOME
(Alleged to infringe)
ANNEX VIII
Cover of April 2002 issue of HOME
(NOT alleged to infringe)
ANNEX IX
Cover of September 1999 issue of HOME
(NOT alleged to infringe)
ANNEX X
Cover of October 1999 issue of HOME
(NOT alleged to infringe)
ANNEX XI
Covers of November 2001 split issue of HOME
ANNEX XII
Cover of April 2001 issue of IDEAL HOME
ANNEX XIII
Cover of September 2002 issue of HOME
(NOT alleged to infringe)