http://ipkitten.blogspot.com/2020/07/prs-for-music-off-to-flying-start-in.html
Background
The applicant, PRS, is a collecting society, whose members comprise of writers, composers and publishers of musical works. PRS have over 5.5 million musical works in their Repertoire of works assigned to them by their members, which are released as sound recordings and used in films, television shows, games and other audio-visual works. Their rights in these works include public performance and communication to the public in the UK, as well as performing rights for all countries in the world.
Dreaming about the days of catching flights… Image: John |
The defendant, Qatar Airways (QA), is the national passenger airline for Qatar, with 206 commercial passenger aircrafts which fly to 160 destinations in 80 countries. QA offers an inflight entertainment system known as “Oryx One”. Not everyone agreed on the details of how Oryx One operates! PRS say that passengers can access audio and audio-visual content via individual onboard screens and headphones, or via an app called Oryx One Play, downloadable on a laptop, mobile or tablet. The app, PRS claim, allows passengers to create playlists of content prior to boarding that can be accessed by the passenger before, during and after a flight. QA say that the app is only available on aircrafts that do not have the Oryx One, onboard screen system and that it cannot be used on laptops. They say that Oryx One does not stream audio/audio-visual content except for some trailers and scheduled content which can only be transferred from the application to the onboard entertainment screen if the aircraft is fitted with near field communication. They also say that the system is only providing during flight, not before or after.
The dispute…
PRS asserts that at least 5,800 of their repertoire works are made available through the QA System. QA accepts that, under UK law, PRS is likely to be the owner of the UK performing right that is embodied in at least some of the audio/audio-visual works that passengers of QA are able to listen to or view on QA’s aircrafts, but maintain that the app does not have access to any relevant audio works.
PRS wants to license QA in respect of its repertoire works on a worldwide or territory-by-territory basis. Moreover, PRS believe that they can obtain an extension to their reciprocal agreements with other collecting societies which would enable PRS to license works beyond their own repertoire.
Airlines are generally granted licences by copyright collecting societies domiciled in the same country as the airline. Collecting societies also tend to have reciprocal agreements that allow them to grant licences in respect of rights assigned to foreign collecting societies. That said, as of May 2020, PRS does not directly license any airline domiciled outside the UK.
On 23 December 2019, PRS issued a claim in the UK against QA for a declaration that QA has infringed the worldwide performing rights, an injunction to prevent further infringement and an inquiry for corresponding damages. PRS alleged that when the QA aircrafts are present in the UK (on the ground or in the territorial airspace) the playing or making available of their repertoire work amounts to a public performance and/or communication to the public under the UK Copyright Designs and Patent Act 1988. Additionally, the same applies when the aircraft is in Qatar under Qatari Law No.7 of 2002 on the Protection of Copyright and Neighbouring Rights. Likewise, when the aircraft is in any country that is a signatory to the Berne Convention, the WIPO Copyright Treaty or the TRIPS Agreement, this amounts to public performance and/or communication to the public of that work within the meaning of corresponding provisions enacted in that country.
The matter at hand; Jurisdiction
QA accepted that it had been served in the UK therefore the UK High Court has jurisdiction, but applied for an order under CPR rule 11(1) that this court should not exercise any jurisdiction which it may have, on the basis that the appropriate forum for these proceedings is Qatar.
Forum non conveniens
In the leading case in this area, Spiliada Maritime Corp v Cansulex Ltd (The Spiliada) [1987] AC 460, Lord Goff set out the relevant principles at 476-478. QA summarised the test in Spiliada as:
(1) Is there another available forum which is clearly and distinctly the natural forum, that is to say, the “forum with which the action has the most real and substantial connection”?
(2) If there is, is England nevertheless the appropriate forum, in particular because the court is not satisfied that substantial justice will be done in the alternative available forum?
Is this is personal or factual connection? Image: Remy Sharp |
Conclusion
The case is really a global copyright dispute between a UK holder of those global rights and a Qatari user of the protected content who is using it all over the world. The dispute has a connection to every state to and from which QA flies planes. [69].
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