http://ipkitten.blogspot.com/2024/10/cjeu-rules-that-eu-member-states-cannot.html
The chair at the centre of the Dutch litigation on its own … |
Last week, the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) issued its much- (though not long-) awaited judgment in Kwantum, C-227/23, substantially upholding the Opinion of Advocate General (AG) Szpunar [IPKat here], which was only issued last month.
The decision
- Both ‘work’ and ‘author’ in the InfoSoc Directive are autonomous concepts of EU law, given that no reference is made to national law in either respect. Hence, they must receive uniform interpretation and application across the EU;
- Unlike other directives (e.g., Article 7(1)(f) of Directive 2006/116), the InfoSoc Directive does not say anything regarding the geographic origin of a work or its author;
- The InfoSoc Directive was adopted to: (i) establish an internal market for copyright goods and services. Such an objective would be “disregarded” if the InfoSoc Directive “regulated, in the European Union, only copyright protection for works originating in a Member State or works the author of which is a national of a Member State.”; (ii) implement into the EU legal order the WIPO Internet Treaties. The WCT requires compliance with Articles 1 to 21 of Berne. Hence, “it would be contrary to the international obligations of the European Union implemented by [the InfoSoc Directive] in the field of intellectual property for that directive to harmonise copyright in respect of works the country of origin of which is a Member State or the author of which is a national of a Member State, while leaving it to the national law of the Member States to determine the legal regime applicable to works the country of origin of which is a third country or the author of which is a national of a third country.”
- Member States cannot rely on Article 2(7) of the Berne Convention to exempt themselves from the obligations under the InfoSoc Directive. As such, they are not entitled to set their own reciprocity clauses;
- Based on the wording of the InfoSoc Directive, the EU decided not to set a reciprocity clause, given that that directive – unlike other EU legislation (e.g., the already mentioned Article 7(1) of Directive 2006/116, but also Article 7(1) of Directive 2001/84) – protects works irrespective of the national origin of either the work or its author.
Comment
… and complete with resting Kat |
For over 15 years – I would put the start to, once again, Infopaq [IPKat anniversary post here] – it has been clear that the CJEU conceives a copyright system where Member State’s discretion is extremely limited, if any at all. That extends well beyond international law to encompass EU (statutory) law itself: if one thinks of what the CJEU has done with originality alone – first the de facto harmonization under the InfoSoc Directive, then the extension thereof as sole criterion of protection to works of applied art, despite the different wording of EU design legislation – it is evident that the seeds of Kwantum were sown not with RAAP but well before that. If not Infopaq, then the outcome of Kwantum was already anticipated by Flos back in 2011 and then Cofemel in 2019.
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