Cooper
v Universal Music Australia Pty Ltd [2006] FCAFC 187
FEDERAL
COURT OF AUSTRALIA
FRENCH, BRANSON AND KENNY JJ
FRENCH J:
1
For the reasons given by Branson and Kenny JJ
respectively, I agree that the appeals should be dismissed, save for the appeal
by Mr Takoushis which should be allowed. I agree with the variations to the
orders of the primary judge proposed by Branson J and with the costs orders
which her Honour proposes.
2
Stephen Cooper was the registered owner of the
domain name ‘mp3s4free.net’ and the originator, owner and operator of the now
disabled ‘MP3s4FREE’ website. Although that website did not contain any music
files, it was structured to allow internet users ready access to music files of
numerous popular sound recordings via hyperlinks. When an internet user clicked
on a particular hyperlink, the music file in question was transmitted directly
to his or her computer from a remote server. It is admitted that the
overwhelming majority of the sound recordings the subject of the music files
were the subject of copyright.
3
E-Talk Communications Pty Limited (‘E-Talk’) and
Com-Cen Pty Limited (‘Com-Cen’) together conducted an internet service provider
business under the name Comcen which hosted Mr Cooper’s website. Liam
Francis Bal is a director and, as the learned primary judge concluded, the
controlling mind, of each of these companies. Chris Takoushis worked in the
Comcen business. It seems that he is an employee of Com-Cen. Mr Takoushis
was Mr Cooper’s primary contact at Comcen and he provided assistance from
time to time in relation to the establishment and operation of Mr Cooper’s
website.
4
A number of Australian record companies and
other entities that own copyright in sound recordings, which I will together
call the ‘Record Companies’, instituted a proceeding in the Court in which they
sought declaratory, injunctive and other relief against Mr Cooper, the two
companies and Messrs Bal and Takoushis in respect of infringements of the Copyright
Act 1968 (Cth) (‘the Act’), the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth), the Fair
Trading Act 1987 (NSW) and the Fair Trading Act 1989 (Qld).
5
On 22 December 2005 the primary judge granted
declaratory and injunctive relief against each of Messrs Cooper, Bal and
Takoushis, and against E-Talk and Com-Cen with damages to be later assessed.
6
These appeals challenge the orders made by his
Honour on 22 December 2005 to the extent that the orders are founded on
his Honour’s conclusion that each of Messrs Cooper, Bal and Takoushis and
E-Talk infringed the Record Companies’ copyright in sound recordings by
authorizing the making of copies, and authorizing the communication by
operators of remote websites to the public, of those sound recordings. Com-Cen
has not appealed from the orders made by the primary judge.
7
As mentioned above, these appeals concern
copyright in sound recordings. A sound recording is not a ‘work’ within
the meaning of the Act (s 10). Nonetheless, copyright may subsist in a
sound recording (s 89).
8
Section 13 of the Act is concerned with the
content of copyright generally. Subsection (1) provides that a reference in the
Act to an act comprised in the copyright in a work or other subject-matter is a
reference to any act that, under the Act, the owner of the copyright has the
exclusive right to do. Subsection (2) relevantly provides that the exclusive
right to do an act in relation to a work or any other subject-matter includes
the exclusive right to authorize a person to do that act in relation to that
work or other subject-matter.
9
Part IV of the Act is concerned with copyright
in subject-matter other than works. It provides that copyright in a sound
recording includes the exclusive right to make a copy of the sound recording
(s 85(1)(a)) and the exclusive right to communicate the recording to the
public (s 85(1)(c)). A recording is communicated within the meaning of
s 85(1)(c) if it is made available online or electronically transmitted
(s 10).
10
Section 101(1), which is in Part IV, provides as
follows:
‘Subject to
this Act, a copyright subsisting by virtue of this Part is infringed by a
person who, not being the owner of the copyright, and without the licence of
the owner of the copyright, does in Australia, or authorizes the doing in
Australia of, any act comprised in the copyright.’ (emphases
added)
11
It appears that at first instance the parties
paid no particular attention to the words ‘in Australia’ which appear
twice in s 101(1). The significance of those words is that they create a
nexus between infringements of copyright under the Act and Australia. Section 101(1)
is drawn to cover conduct done in Australia (ie. not being the owner, and
without the licence of the owner, doing in Australia an act comprised in the
copyright) and some conduct which, although not necessarily done in Australia,
relates to conduct done in Australia (ie. the authorizing of the doing in
Australia of an act comprised in the copyright). The subsection can thus be
seen to create two classes of infringement; one class involving infringing
conduct in Australia and the other class relating to infringing conduct in
Australia.
12
If s 101(1) did not include the phrase ‘or
authorizes the doing in Australia of’, it would be construed as applying
only to conduct in Australia. That is, it would not reach to authorizations
given outside Australia to do an act in Australia which the owner of the
copyright has the exclusive right to do (Jumbunna Coal Mine No Liability v
Victorian Coal Miners’ Association (1908) 6 CLR 309; s 21 of the Acts
Interpretation Act 1901 (Cth)). I think it likely that the only intended
effect of the phrase ‘or authorizes the doing in Australia of’ in
s 101(1) was to exclude the presumption that the section was concerned
solely with conduct in Australia. I doubt that the phrase was intended, as the
Record Companies contended, to create a cause of action of authorizing an
authorizer. However, it is not necessary for the purposes of this appeal to
reach a concluded view on this question. Nor is it necessary to determine the extent,
if any, of the practical difference between authorizing and authorizing someone
else to authorize. The primary judge found that Mr Cooper’s website
attracted significant use in Australia. In any event, the Record Companies’
case at first instance was not defended on the basis that the conduct upon
which they relied as constituting copyright infringement lacked the necessary
nexus with Australia. The appellants are bound by their conduct in their
respective cases at first instance. They are also bound by their respective
notices of appeal (see [26], [53] and [66] below).
13
Section 101(1A) was inserted into the Act by the
Copyright Amendment (Digital Agenda) Act 2000 (Cth) (‘the Digital Agenda
Act’). It identifies certain matters that must be taken into account in
determining, for the purposes of subsection (1), whether or not a person has
authorized the doing in Australia of any act comprised in a copyright
subsisting by virtue of Part IV. The matters so identified are not the only
matters that may be taken into account.
14
Section 101(1A) may be assumed to have
particular relevance in circumstances in which it is alleged that the act of
infringement occurred in the online environment. This is because one of the
objects of the Digital Agenda Act was to amend the Act so as to ensure
the efficient operation of relevant industries in the online environment
(s 3).
15
Section 101(1A) of the Act recognises that an
element of judgment is involved in determining whether one person has, for the
purposes of s 101(1), authorized another to do an act. It provides that:
‘the
matters that must be taken into account include the following:
(a) the
extent (if any) of the person’s power to prevent the doing of the act
concerned;
(b) the
nature of any relationship existing between the person and the person who did
the act concerned;
(c) whether
the person took any other reasonable steps to prevent or avoid the doing of the
act, including whether the person complied with any relevant industry codes of
practice.’
16
Section 112E, which was also inserted into
the Act by the Digital Agenda Act, provides:
‘A person
(including a carrier or carriage service provider) who provides facilities for
making, or facilitating the making of, a communication is not taken to have
authorised any infringement of copyright in an audio-visual item merely because
another person uses the facilities so provided to do something the right to do
which is included in the copyright.’
17
It was the same amending Act which inserted into
s 10 of the Act the definition of ‘communicate’ referred to above. That
definition is relevantly in the following terms:
‘communicate
means make available online or electronically transmit … a work or other
subject-matter…’
18
Unless the contrary intention appears, ‘communication’
in s 112E will have a meaning that corresponds with the definition of ‘communicate’
(s 18A of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901 (Cth)). No party
suggests that a contrary intention does appear in s 112E. A sound
recording is an audio‑visual item within the meaning of s 112E (s 100A
of the Act).
19
Section 112E thus qualifies the operation of
s 101(1A) when it is necessary to determine whether a person authorized
the copying in Australia of a sound recording in circumstances where the
relevant copying involved the making available online, or the electronic
transmission of, the sound recording via facilities provided by that person. The
person is not taken to have authorized the infringement merely because another
person used the facilities provided by that person to achieve the making of a
copy.
20
Prior to the coming into operation of the
Digital Agenda Act the word ‘authorizes’ in the context of
copyright infringement had been held to mean sanctions, approves or
countenances (Australasian Performing Right Association Limited v Jain (1990)
26 FCR 53 at 57‑60). The Digital Agenda Act does not disclose a
legislative intention to alter the meaning of the word ‘authorizes’ in
the context of the Act. However, as mentioned above, s 101(1A) does
disclose an intention to guide the process by which a judgment is reached as to
whether a person authorized the doing in Australia of an act comprised in the
copyright; the decision-maker must have regard to the matters identified in the
subsection. As mentioned above, these matters may be understood to have
particular relevance where the alleged act of infringement has occurred online.
21
The primary judge made six declaratory orders
and six restraining orders in similar terms against each of the appellants and
Com-Cen. Each declaratory and restraining order relates to a particular
schedule of sound recordings annexed to the orders.
22
A schedule of definitions, which forms part of
the orders, provides the link between the terms of the orders and the schedules
of sound recordings and additionally gives meaning to certain terms in the
orders such as, for example, ‘Universal Catalogue’ and ‘Universal
Recordings’.
23
The form of each of the six declaratory orders
can be illustrated by setting out the terms of the first of them:
‘1. The
first, second, third, fourth and fifth respondents have infringed the copyright
in sound recordings in the Universal Recordings, by:
(a) authorising the making of copies of; and
(b) authorising
the communication to the public of,
the whole or
a substantial part of those sound recordings without the licence of the first applicant
or the owner of the copyright.’
24
The form of each of the six restraining orders
can also be illustrated by setting out the terms of the first of them:
‘13. The
first, second, third, fourth and fifth respondents, whether by themselves,
their servants or agents or otherwise, be permanently restrained from:
(a) making a copy of;
(b) authorising the making of a copy of;
(c) communicating to the public; or
(d) authorising
the communication to the public of,
the whole or
a substantial part of any of the sound recordings in the Universal Catalogue
including the Universal Recordings without the licence of the first applicant
or the owner of the copyright.’
25
Additionally the primary judge made orders
permanently restraining the appellants and Com-Cen from operating or hosting
the MP3s4FREE website and orders as to costs.
26
Mr Cooper’s appeal is brought on only two
grounds, namely:
‘1. His
Honour erred in finding and declaring that by providing a website with
hypertext links (hyperlinks), the appellant authorised the making of copies of
the whole or a substantial part of the alleged sound recordings without the
licence of the owners or exclusive licensees of those sound recordings as in
the circumstances providing hyperlinks does not amount to authorisation under
the Copyright Act 1968.
2.
His
Honour erred in finding and declaring that by providing a website with
hypertext links (hyperlinks), the appellant authorised the communication to the
public of the whole or a substantial part of the alleged sound recordings
without the licence of the owners nor exclusive licensees of the copyright as
in the circumstances providing hyperlinks does not amount to authorisation
under the Copyright Act 1968.’
27
As Mr Cooper’s appeal was argued the sole
issue for this Court’s determination is the true meaning of the term ‘authorize’
in s 13(2) of the Act and the related term ‘authorizes’ in
s 101(1) of the Act.
28
The issue of whether Mr Cooper authorized
internet users in Australia to copy, and operators of remote websites to
communicate to the public, music files constituting sound recordings in which
the Record Companies hold copyright must be determined primarily by reference to
s 101(1A) of the Act (see [15] above). The appropriate starting point is
to have regard to the matters identified in pars (a)‑(c) of
s 101(1A).
29
Mr Cooper submitted that he did not have any
power to prevent the doing of the acts comprised in the copyright of the sound
recordings in issue because he did not have power to prevent:
(a)
a
person from making an MP3 file from a sound recording in another format (eg
from a compact disc);
(b)
a
person from making an MP3 file generally accessible over the internet; and
(c)
a
person from accessing an MP3 file that another person had made generally
accessible over the internet.
30
The above submission appears to overlook that
the copyright in a sound recording is infringed each time that it is copied
without proper authority. The making of a particular unauthorized copy is no
less an infringement of the owner’s copyright because other unauthorized copies
are also made or are likely to be made.
31
Additionally, Mr Cooper submitted that to
facilitate copying or communication is not to authorize it. He placed reliance
on observations made by Lord Templeman in CBS Songs Ltd v Amstrad Consumer
Electronics Plc [1988] AC 1013 and by Sackville J, with whom
Jenkinson and Burchett JJ agreed, in Nationwide News Pty Ltd v Copyright
Agency Limited (1996) 65 FCR 399 at 422. His Honour there observed that:
‘a person
does not authorise an infringement merely because he or she knows that another
person might infringe the copyright and takes no step to prevent the
infringement.’
For the
reasons given below (see in particular [37] and [43]) I conclude that
Mr Cooper did not merely facilitate the infringements of copyright upon
which the case of the Record Companies relied. He engaged in additional
relevant conduct so as to take himself outside the purview of his Honour’s
observation.
32
Before considering the extent (if any) of
Mr Cooper’s power to prevent the copying or communication to the public of
sound recordings in which the Record Companies hold copyright, it is necessary
to determine what is meant by ‘power to prevent’ in s 101(1A)(a). The
appellants contended, in effect, that unless Mr Cooper had power, at the
time of the making of an infringing copy of a sound recording, to prevent that
copy being made, he had no power to prevent within the meaning of
s 101(1A)(a). Unless s 112E of the Act, which is set out in paragraph
[16] above, were enacted simply out of an abundance of caution, it presupposes
that a person who merely provides facilities for making a communication might,
absent the section, be taken to have authorized an infringement of copyright in
an audio visual item effected by use of the facility. This presupposition is
inconsistent with the submission of the appellants. However, in my view, it is
consistent with the ordinary understanding of authorization. The following
hypothetical situation may be considered. One person has a vial which contains
active and highly infectious micro-organisms which are ordinarily passed from
human to human by the coughing of an infected person. He or she authorizes
another person to break the vial in a crowded room knowing that this will
result in some people in the room becoming infected with the micro-organisms. Most
people would, I think, regard the first person as having authorized the
infection not only of those in the room, but also the wider group thereafter
directly infected by them, notwithstanding that he or she had no power to
prevent those who were in the room from coughing.
33
In determining what is meant by ‘power to
prevent’ in s 101(1A)(a) it is appropriate then to turn to relevant
authorities concerning authorization in the context of copyright law, and in
particular, to the Australian authorities as it is these to which the legislature
may be presumed to have given particular attention when enacting
s 101(1A)(a).
34
In University of New South Wales v Moorhouse (1975)
133 CLR 1 the High Court unanimously held that the University had infringed
Mr Moorhouse’s copyright in a book of short stories by authorizing the
making of an infringing copy of one of the stories. The relevant circumstances
were that a copy of Mr Moorhouse’s book was held on open shelves in the
University’s library and the University placed a coin‑operated photocopier
in that library. Jacobs J, with whom McTiernan ACJ agreed, identified
at 21 the real question to be determined as whether there was in the
circumstances an invitation to be implied that the person who made the
infringing copy might, in common with other users of the library, make such use
of the photocopying facilities as he thought fit. His Honour found that such an
invitation was to be implied. He concluded that it was immaterial that the
library was not open to all comers, that use of the photocopier was not
intended to generate a profit to the University and that the University did not
know that users of the photocopier were doing acts comprised in authors’
copyrights ‑ and may even have been entitled to assume that users would
obey the law of copyright.
35
In a separate judgment Gibbs J, after
noting at 12 that a person cannot be said to authorize an infringement of
copyright unless he or she has some power to prevent it, said at 13 that:
‘a person
who has under his control the means by which an infringement of copyright may
be committed — such as a photocopying machine — and who makes it available to
other persons, knowing, or having reason to suspect, that it is likely to be
used for the purpose of committing an infringement, and omitting to take reasonable
steps to limit its use to legitimate purposes, would authorize any infringement
that resulted from its use.’
36
It seems to me that both Jacobs and
Gibbs JJ concentrated on the behaviour of the University in making the
photocopier available for use in the library rather than on the issue of the
University’s capacity to control the use of the photocopier once it had been
made available to library users. The observation of Gibbs J that a person
cannot be said to authorize an infringement unless he or she has some power to
prevent it must be understood in this context. That is, the relevant power
which the University had to prevent the copyright infringement must be
understood to have been, or at least to have included, the power not to allow a
coin-operated photocopier in the library.
37
Some support for this understanding of Moorhouse
can be found in Australian Tape Manufacturers Association Ltd v The
Commonwealth of Australia (1993) 176 CLR 480. In that case at 498 Mason CJ
and Brennan, Deane and Gaudron JJ identified a distinction between the
mere sale of an article, such as a blank tape or a video recorder, where there
is a likelihood that the article will be used for an infringing purpose and the
circumstances of Moorhouse. Their Honours noted that in Moorhouse
the University not only failed to take steps to prevent infringement; it
provided potential infringers with both the copyright material and the means by
which it could be copied.
38
Some, albeit limited, support for understanding
the reference in s 101(1A)(a) to ‘the person’s power to prevent the
doing of the act concerned’ to include the person’s power to avoid the
means of infringement becoming available for use can, in my view, be found in Australasian
Performing Right Association Limited v Jain. In that case the Full Court,
which concluded that Mr Jain had authorized the infringement of copyright
in question, said at 61:
‘The
judgment of the members of the High Court in the Moorhouse
case
establishes that one of the meanings of the word “authorize”
in the context in which it is here used is “countenance”.
It may be that not every act which amounts to the countenancing of something is
an authorisation. Every case will depend upon its own facts. Matters of degree
are involved. But the evidence in the present case reveals … a studied and
deliberate course of action in which Mr Jain decided to ignore the appellant’s
rights and to allow a situation to develop and to continue in which he must
have known that it was likely that the appellant’s music would be played
without any licence from it.’
39
Additionally, as mentioned in [32] above, the
introduction of s 112E into the Act suggests that, absent that section, a
mere provider of facilities for making communications could have been held to
have authorized copyright infringements effected by the use of those
facilities. I do not accept, as Mr Cooper contended, that s 112E was
introduced into the Act simply out of an abundance of caution. The
supplementary explanatory memorandum for the Copyright Amendment (Digital
Agenda) Bill indicates otherwise by stating that the new s 112E:
‘has the
effect of expressly limiting the authorisation liability of persons who provide
facilities for the making of, or facilitating the making of, communications.’
40
Mr Cooper placed considerable weight on a
suggested analogy between his website and Google. Two things may be said in
this regard. First, Mr Cooper’s assumption that Google’s activities in
Australia do not result in infringements of the Act is untested. Perfect 10
Inc v Google Inc 416 F.Supp.2d 828 (C.D.Cal 2006) upon which Mr Cooper
placed reliance is a decision under the law of the United States of America
which includes the doctrine of ‘fair use’. Secondly, Google is a general
purpose search engine rather than a website designed to facilitate the
downloading of music files. The suggested analogy is unhelpful in the context
of Mr Cooper’s appeal.
41
I therefore reject the contention that unless Mr
Cooper had power, at the time of the doing of each relevant act comprised in a
copyright subsisting by virtue of the Act, to prevent its being done, he had no
relevant power within the meaning of s 101(1A)(a). I conclude that, within
the meaning of the paragraph, a person’s power to prevent the doing of an act
comprised in a copyright includes the person’s power not to facilitate the
doing of that act by, for example, making available to the public a technical
capacity calculated to lead to the doing of that act. The evidence leads to the
inexorable inference that it was the deliberate choice of Mr Cooper to
establish and maintain his website in a form which did not give him the power
immediately to prevent, or immediately to restrict, internet users from using
links on his website to access remote websites for the purpose of copying sound
recordings in which copyright subsisted.
42
I conclude that, within the meaning of
s 101(1A)(a), Mr Cooper had power to prevent the copying in Australia of
copyright sound recordings via his website. He had that power because he was
responsible for creating and maintaining his MP3s4FREE website. As stated
above, the principal content of the website comprised links to other websites
and files contained on other servers. Senior counsel for Mr Cooper
conceded that, in effect, the overwhelming majority of the files listed on the
website were the subject of copyright. The website was structured so that when
a user clicked on a link to a specific music file a copy of that file was
transmitted directly to the user’s computer.
43
It is immaterial, in my view, that
Mr Cooper’s website operated automatically in the sense that, although he
could edit links on the site, he did not control the usual way in which links were
added to the site. The evidence also leads to the inexorable inference that it
was the deliberate choice of Mr Cooper to establish his website in a way
which allowed the automatic addition of hyperlinks.
44
I also conclude that, within the meaning of
s 101(1A)(a), Mr Cooper had power to prevent the communication of
copyright sound recordings to the public in Australia via his website. Again he
had that power because he was responsible for creating and maintaining his
MP3s4FREE website with the characteristics referred to above.
45
For the above reasons, I find that, within the
meaning of s 101(1A)(a), the extent of Mr Cooper’s power to prevent
copyright infringements via his website was considerable.
46
Mr Cooper submitted that he did not have
any relationship with people who made MP3 files generally accessible over the
internet or with people who downloaded such files from remote websites via
hyperlinks on his website. The findings of the primary judge do not suggest any
relationship between Mr Cooper and those who made MP3 files generally
accessible over the internet. However, the same cannot be said of his Honour’s
findings concerning those who downloaded music files via Mr Cooper’s
website.
47
An aspect of the nature of the relationship
existing between Mr Cooper and those users of the internet who obtained copyright
sound recordings from the internet via his website is that the users were
attracted to Mr Cooper’s website and obtained the sound recordings by
clicking on hyperlinks on that website. The primary judge found that
Mr Cooper’s website was user friendly and allowed internet users readily
to select from a variety of catalogues of popular sound recordings.
48
His Honour also found that Mr Cooper
benefited financially from sponsorship and advertisements on the website; that
is, that the relationship between Mr Cooper and the users of his website
had a commercial aspect. Mr Cooper’s benefits from advertising and sponsorship
may be assumed to have been related to the actual or expected exposure of the
website to internet users. As a consequence Mr Cooper had a commercial
interest in attracting users to his website for the purpose of copying digital
music files.
49
Mr Cooper did not suggest, other than by
reference to disclaimers on his website, that he took any reasonable steps to
avoid the infringements of copyright. As those disclaimers misstated Australian
copyright law in a material way, the inclusion of them on the website did not
constitute a reasonable step to prevent or avoid the infringement of copyright.
In any event, I would have attributed little, if any, weight to them as, on his
Honour’s findings, their intended purpose was merely cosmetic.
50
The reasons for judgment of the primary judge
make no reference to any relevant industry codes. It appears that the parties
agreed at trial that there were no relevant industry codes to which his Honour
could have regard.
51
I conclude that Mr Cooper did not establish
that he took any reasonable steps to prevent or avoid the use of his website
for copying copyright sound recordings or for communicating such recordings to
the public.
52
Having taken into account the matters identified
above, and the name of his website, I conclude that Mr Cooper infringed
the Record Companies’ respective copyrights in sound recordings by in Australia
authorizing internet users to do acts comprised in those copyrights, namely
make copies of the sound recordings. I also conclude that Mr Cooper
infringed the Record Companies’ respective copyright in sound recordings by
authorizing operators of remote websites to communicate those sound recordings
to the public in Australia.
53
The amended notice of appeal of E-Talk and
Mr Bal remained confusingly drawn notwithstanding the deletion of most of
the original grounds of appeal. However, the appeal was argued without
objection on the basis that the primary judge erred:
(a)
in
failing to find that, by reason of s 112E of the Act, E-Talk and Mr Bal
were to be taken not to have authorized any infringement of copyright in sound
recordings by users of Mr Cooper’s website; or alternatively
(b)
if
s 112E had no relevant operation, in finding that E-Talk and Mr Bal had
authorized any relevant infringing conduct.
54
Mr Bal did not challenge the conclusion of
the primary judge that, as the controlling mind of E-Talk, he was liable for
the infringing conduct of E-Talk. As a result, the discussion that follows
dealing with the conduct of E-Talk similarly applies to Mr Bal.
55
It is not in dispute that E-Talk is a ‘person
… who provides facilities for making, or facilitating the making of, a
communication’ within the meaning of s 112E of the Act. E-Talk and
Mr Bal challenge the conclusion of the primary judge that E-Talk did more
than merely provide facilities for the making of communications.
56
The effect of s 112E in the circumstances
of this appeal is that E-Talk is not to be taken to have authorized any
infringement of copyright in a sound recording just because internet users used
Mr Cooper’s website to download music files of sound recordings in which
the Record Companies hold copyright.
57
E-Talk and Mr Bal submitted that, at its
highest, the evidence before the primary judge demonstrated that the conduct of
E-Talk was:
‘the mere
facilitation of the connection of the website to the Internet, without any
knowledge of the operation of the website, beyond knowledge of its mere
existence.’
58
The above submission is untenable. No challenge
is made to the findings of the primary judge that:
(a)
E-Talk
(which traded as Comcen Internet Services), together with Com-Cen, conducted an
internet service provider business under the name Comcen;
(b)
The
Comcen business hosted Mr Cooper’s website;
(c)
E-Talk
was aware of the high level of usage of Mr Cooper’s website and of the
copyright problems arising therefrom;
(d)
Mr
Cooper received free web-hosting from Comcen in return for the display on his
website of the Comcen logo with a hyperlink to the Comcen website, www.comcen.com.au;
and
(e)
E-Talk
took no steps to prevent the acts of infringement which took place via
Mr Cooper’s website.
59
The evidence before his Honour established that
the registered owner of the domain name www.comcen.com.au was E-Talk.
60
In my view, the above findings of the primary
judge were sufficient to support the primary judge’s conclusion that E-Talk was
unable to invoke the protection afforded by s 112E. His Honour did not
find that E-Talk authorized an infringement of copyright in a sound recording
just because another person used its facilities to do something the right to do
which is included in the copyright.
61
In determining whether E-Talk authorized the
doing in Australia of any act comprised in the Record Companies’ copyrights it
is necessary to take into account, together with other relevant things, the
matters identified in s 101(1A) of the Act (see [15] above).
62
As all of the relevant acts of copyright
infringement took place via Mr Cooper’s website, I conclude that E-Talk
had power to prevent the doing of the acts concerned because, together with Com‑Cen
(of which Mr Bal was also the controlling mind), it had the power to
withdraw the hosting of Mr Cooper’s website (s 101(1A)(a)).
63
I would place no weight on the, at best, remote
relationships between E-Talk, on the one hand, and the users of
Mr Cooper’s website and the remote providers of music files on the other
hand (s 101(1A)(b)).
64
E-Talk could have, but did not, take reasonable
steps to prevent or avoid the doing of the acts of infringement
(s 101(1A)(c)). Rather than withdrawing hosting of Mr Cooper’s
website, or otherwise placing pressure on Mr Cooper to stop his website
being used for the predominant purpose of copyright infringements, E-Talk
sought to achieve a commercial advantage from advertising on Mr Cooper’s
website.
65
In the circumstances, in my view, no error has
been shown to affect the conclusion of the primary judge that E-Talk and
Mr Bal, its controlling mind, authorized the acts of copyright
infringement which resulted from the use of Mr Cooper’s website. At the
least, E-Talk countenanced the acts of infringement (see Australasian
Performing Rights Association Limited v Jain and [20] above).
66
Mr Takoushis’ amended notice of appeal raised
two issues; first, whether he was entitled to invoke the protection of
s 112E of the Act and secondly, whether his conduct as an employee of
Mr Cooper’s internet service provider was capable of constituting conduct
which authorized the doing in Australia of any act comprised in the Record
Companies’ copyrights in sound recordings.
67
The precise basis upon which the primary judge
concluded that Mr Takoushis infringed the Record Companies’ copyright by
authorizing the making of copies, and the communication to the public, of sound
records is not clear.
68
His Honour may have concluded that
Mr Takoushis infringed the Record Companies’ copyright by personally
authorizing acts of copyright infringement, or alternatively, that
Mr Takoushis was liable in respect of the infringing conduct of either or
both of Com-Cen and E-Talk. His Honour’s reasons for judgment specifically
record, however, that his Honour did not find that Mr Takoushis was liable
as a joint tortfeasor with either or both of Com-Cen and E-Talk (see WEA
International Inc v Hanimex Corporation Ltd (1987) 17 FCR 274 at 283).
69
Mr Takoushis had studied information
technology at TAFE before becoming an employee of Com-Cen. He gave evidence
that his position within that company was essentially a computing support role.
His Honour found that Mr Takoushis was Mr Cooper’s primary contact with
Comcen and that he provided assistance from time to time in relation to the
establishment and operation of Mr Cooper’s website.
70
The evidence did not establish that Mr Takoushis
had any personal power to prevent the doing of the acts of copyright
infringement (s 101(1A)(a)). He was not Mr Cooper’s internet service
provider; he was merely an employee of the internet service provider – albeit
an employee with skills in computer technology who undertook work in relation
to Mr Cooper’s website.
71
Nor did the evidence establish that there was
any relevant relationship between Mr Takoushis and the users of
Mr Cooper’s website or between Mr Takoushis and the operators of the
remote websites from which sound recordings were communicated
(s 101(1A)(b)). Nor did the evidence suggest that there was any reasonable
step open to be taken by Mr Takoushis personally to prevent or avoid the
doing of the acts of copyright infringement. While it would have been a
reasonable step for Mr Takoushis’ employer to have terminated its hosting
of Mr Cooper’s website, either absolutely or unless he removed the
hyperlinks on it which facilitated copyright infringement, the evidence did not
establish that Mr Takoushis had the necessary authority to do so himself
(s 101(1A)(c)). I do not consider that it would have been a reasonable
step for Mr Takoushis to approach his employer to compel them to do so.
72
It may be that Mr Takoushis can be
understood to have ‘countenanced’ the acts of copyright infringement in the
sense that he supported or showed favour to those acts (see The Macquarie
Dictionary, 2nd edn). However, as the Full Court observed in Australian
Performing Right Association Ltd v Jain at 61, every case in which the
issue of whether a person authorized an act of copyright infringement arises
will depend on its own facts and involve matters of degree. Mr Takoushis
was not a director of either Com-Cen or E‑Talk. Nor was he shown to be an
executive or shareholder of either of those companies. His evidence that his
position within Com-Cen was essentially a computing support role was not
challenged.
73
In my view, the evidence before the primary
judge was insufficient to establish that Mr Takoushis infringed the Record
Companies’ copyright by personally authorizing the relevant acts of copyright
infringement.
74
Further, for the reasons given above, the
evidence before the primary judge was insufficient to demonstrate that Mr
Takoushis held an executive or managerial role within either Com-Cen or E-Talk
such that his involvement with their acts of copyright infringement rendered
him personally liable for those acts of copyright infringement. I would reach
the same conclusion whether I were to adopt the test which Lindgren J
favoured in Microsoft Corporation v Auschina Polaris Pty Ltd (1996) 71
FCR 231 at 239-246 or the approach favoured by Finkelstein J in Root
Quality Pty Ltd v Root Control Technologies Pty Ltd (2000) 177 ALR 231 at
[113]-[149]. It is therefore unnecessary for me to express a preference for one
view over the other.
75
In each appeal the Record Companies filed a
notice of contention. The filing of a notice of contention is a practice for
which O 52 r 22(3) of the Federal Court Rules provides. Order
52 r 22 is primarily concerned to authorize a respondent who wishes
to appeal from part only of a judgment to file a cross-appeal rather than
institute a substantive appeal. However, O 52 r 22(3) relevantly
provides:
‘If the
respondent proposes to contend that the judgment should be affirmed on grounds
other than those relied on by the court below, but does not seek a discharge or
variation of any part of the judgment, the respondent need not file a notice of
cross-appeal, but must:
(a) file
a notice of the respondent’s contention within 21 days after the service upon
the respondent of the notice of appeal …’
76
As the terms of O 52 r 22(3) make
clear, the purpose of a notice of contention is to place the appellant and the
Court on notice that the respondent contends that the judgment below (ie the
orders made below) can be supported on grounds other than those which the court
below relied on when pronouncing the judgment. That is, that even if a ground
of appeal is made out, it may not lead to the order the subject of the appeal
being set aside or varied. The filing of a notice of contention is not a
mechanism for challenging any order made below or for challenging the failure
of the court below to make an order to which a party below claimed to be
entitled.
77
In Mr Cooper’s appeal the Record Companies
filed a notice of contention in the following terms:
‘The first
to thirty-fourth respondents will contend that the judgment below should be
affirmed on the following grounds additional to those relied upon by the
primary Judge:
1.
The
appellant:
(a) authorised
the acts of each of the thirty-fifth respondent (E-Talk) and the
thirty-sixth respondent (Com-Cen) whereby the first to thirty-fourth
respondents’ copyright was infringed;
(b) was
a joint tortfeasor in those acts in that he entered into a common design with
or participated with each of E-Talk and Com-Cen to carry out those acts.’
78
Contention 1(a) above is intended to raise the
issue of whether, as discussed in [12] above, s 101(1) of the Act creates
an act of infringement constituted by authorizing a person, not being the owner
of the copyright, and without the licence of the owner of the copyright, to
authorize in Australia a person to do an act comprised in the copyright.
79
Neither the terms of the second further amended
application nor his Honour’s reasons for judgment suggest that the Record
Companies propounded a claim below on the basis that Mr Cooper had
authorized E-Talk and Com-Cen to authorize the making in Australia of copies,
or the communication in Australia to the public, of sound recordings in which
the Record Companies hold copyright. The Record Companies did not attempt to
demonstrate on appeal that it would be expedient in the interests of justice to
allow them to raise this argument for the first time on appeal (Carey-Hazell
v Getz Bros & Co (Aust) Pty Ld [2006] FCAFC 48 at [54]). For this
reason, even if the contention were otherwise appropriately advanced, I would
not allow the Record Companies to rely on it.
80
However, in my view, the contention is not
otherwise appropriately raised. No order made by the primary judge could be
affirmed on the ground identified in contention 1(a) (see [76] above). As
mentioned above, a notice of contention is not a mechanism for challenging the
failure of the court below to make an order. Such a challenge must be made by
the filing of a notice of appeal or notice of cross-appeal.
81
Contention 1(b) identifies a ground, not relied
on by his Honour below, on which the six declaratory orders and six restraining
orders referred to in [23]-[24] above could be affirmed as against
Mr Cooper. His Honour was not satisfied that Mr Cooper was a joint
tortfeasor with E-Talk and Com-Cen. However, as the appeals against those
orders so far as they reach to Mr Cooper should, in my view, be dismissed,
the merits of this contention need not be considered.
82
This notice of contention also raises the issue
of whether s 101(1) of the Act creates an act of infringement constituted by
authorizing another to authorize in Australia a person to do an act comprised
in a copyright. For the reasons given above, it is not expedient in the
interests of justice to allow the Record Companies to raise this issue on
appeal.
83
The notice additionally raises the contention
that the declaratory and restraining orders from which E-Talk and Mr Bal appeal
could be affirmed on the ground that E-Talk was a joint tortfeasor with
Mr Cooper and Mr Bal was a joint tortfeasor with each of
Mr Cooper, E-Talk and Com-Cen. As the appeals against those orders so far
as they reach to E-Talk and Mr Bal should, in my view, be dismissed, the
merits of this contention need not be considered.
84
The notice of contention additionally asserts
that Mr Bal directed or procured the acts of each of E-Talk and Com-Cen whereby
the Record Companies’ copyright was infringed or deliberately or recklessly
directed the commission of those acts so as to make the conduct his own. For
the reason given above the merits of this contention also need not be
considered.
85
This notice of contention also raises the issue
of the proper construction of s 101(1) of the Act. For the reasons given
above in respect of the other two notices of contention, it is not expedient in
the interests of justice to allow the Record Companies to raise this issue on
appeal.
86
Additionally this notice of contention asserts
that Mr Takoushis:
(a)
was
a joint tortfeasor with Mr Cooper, E-Talk and Com-Cen; and
(b)
directed
or procured the acts of each of E-Talk and Com-Cen whereby the Record
Companies’ copyright was infringed or deliberately or recklessly directed the
commission of those acts so as to make the conduct his own.
87
In Thompson v Australian Capital Television
Pty Limited (1996) 186 CLR 574 at 580 Brennan CJ, Dawson and Toohey JJ
approved the statement in The Koursk [1924] P 140 at 159-160 that
for there to be joint tortfeasors ‘there must be a concurrence in the act or
acts causing damage, not merely a coincidence of separate acts which by their
conjoined effect cause damage.’ Their Honours went on to say:
‘Principal
and agent may be joint tortfeasors where the agent commits a tort on behalf of
the principal, as master and servant may be where the servant commits a tort in
the course of employment. Persons who breach a joint duty may also be joint
tortfeasors. Otherwise, to constitute joint tortfeasors two or more persons
must act in concert in committing the tort.’
88
I have concluded above that Mr Takoushis
did not authorize the acts of copyright infringement undertaken by the users of
Mr Cooper’s website or by the hosts of the remote websites. For this
reason no issue arises of his being a joint tortfeasor with his employer
because he committed a tort in the course of his employment; he did not commit
the suggested tort.
89
The Record Companies challenged the primary
judge’s rejection of their allegation that Mr Takoushis acted in concert
with Mr Cooper, E-Talk and Com-Cen on the basis that his Honour took too
narrow a view of what constitutes acting in concert. They pointed to
Mr Takoushis’ role in the establishment and maintenance of
Mr Cooper’s website, his knowledge of legal problems with the website and
his ability to prevent Mr Cooper’s copyright infringements by simply
denying him web hosting.
90
As I have already indicated, I do not accept
that Mr Takoushis had the authority to deny Mr Cooper web hosting. Having
regard to the matters identified in [70]-[72] above, the other factors to which
the Record Companies point are insufficient to establish that the primary judge
erred in concluding that Mr Takoushis was not a joint tortfeasor with
Mr Cooper, E‑Talk or Com-Cen.
91
For the above reasons, the orders made against
Mr Takoushis at first instance cannot be affirmed on the grounds
identified in the Record Companies’ notice of contention.
92
For the above reasons, I would dismiss the
appeals of Mr Cooper, E-Talk and Mr Bal but allow the appeal of
Mr Takoushis. The dismissal of the appeals of Mr Cooper, E-Talk and
Mr Bal should, however, be subject to the amendment of each of the
declarations and restraining orders made by the primary judge to clarify that
the declarations and restraining orders relate to infringing conduct in
Australia.
93
To reflect the allowing of Mr Takoushis’ appeal,
the orders made by the primary judge should additionally be varied by:
(a)
removing
from orders 1-6 (inclusive), 13-18 (inclusive) and 26 the words ‘fourth and
fifth respondents’ and replacing them with the words ‘and fourth
respondent’;
(b)
varying
order 29 as follows:
(i)
by
adding ‘and’ at the end of par (a);
(ii)
by
replacing ‘20%’ with ‘30%’ in par (b);
(iii)
by
adding a full-stop after ‘respondents’ in par (b) and deleting
everything thereafter.
94
Mr Cooper, E-Talk and Mr Bal should
pay the Record Companies’ costs of their appeals. The Record Companies should
pay Mr Takoushis’ costs at first instance and on appeal.
KENNY J:
95
On 14 July 2005, a judge of this Court found
that Mr Stephen Cooper, who is an appellant in these appeals, contravened the Copyright
Act 1968 (Cth) (“the Act”) by authorizing infringements by internet users
of copyright in popular music sound recordings. Internet users used his website
“mp3s4free.net” (referred to below as “the website”) to download the
recordings, which were stored on remote websites. These remote websites were
neither owned nor operated by Mr Cooper nor any other party to the proceeding. The
learned primary judge found that Mr Cooper also breached the Act by authorizing
infringements of copyright in the sound recordings by the unnamed owners or
operators of these sites.
96
In addition, the primary judge found that, by
agreeing to host the website and assisting with its operation, the second to
fifth respondents, E-Talk Communications Pty Limited (“E-Talk”), Com-Cen Pty Limited
(subject to deed of company arrangement) (“Com-Cen”), and Messrs Liam Francis
Bal and Chris Takoushis had also contravened the Act by authorizing
infringements of copyright in the sound recordings: see Universal Music
Australia Pty Ltd v Cooper (2005) 150 FCR 1 (“Universal Music”) at
23-24 [100] and 29 [131]. With the exception of Com-Cen, they too are
appellants in these appeals.
97
For the reasons that follow, I would allow the
appeal of Mr Takoushis and dismiss the appeals of Mr Cooper, E-Talk and
Mr Bal.
The factual background
98
The primary judge described the technological
context in which Mr Cooper operated his website in some detail: see Universal
Music at 8-11 [18]-[28]. Whilst it is unnecessary to repeat his Honour’s
description here, concepts of linking and downloading from remote computers to
an internet user are central to the appeals. It is also important to bear in
mind that his Honour found that hyperlinks were established on the website by
software tools that the website itself made available to internet users; and
that, in order for Mr Cooper to enable files to be automatically linked to the
website by internet users, he must have given permission for this access: see Universal
Music at 9 [22]. The following facts appear from his Honour’s judgment.
99
Mr Cooper was the registered owner of the domain
name “mp3s4free.net” and the owner and operator of the website. He derived income
from his website through advertising arrangements: see Universal Music at
4 [5]. By clicking on a hypertext link (“hyperlink”) on the website, internet
users could download to their own computers copies of sound recordings directly
from remote websites: see Universal Music at 7-8 [15]. On these remote
websites, the sound recordings were mostly stored as MP3 digital music files.
100
Mr Cooper’s website was “a highly structured and
organised one”, “with hyperlinks to many other pages” and was “user friendly and
attractive”: see Universal Music at 5 [13] and 7 [15]. The home page of
the website, which contained numerous web pages, made statements about the
availability of free songs. On one side of each webpage, the Com-Cen logo
appeared under a reference to “Best Server”: see Universal Music at 8
[16]. Each of the website’s pages contained hyperlinks to the site’s “Privacy
Policy”, “Terms and Conditions” and “Disclaimer”. Of these matters, His Honour
said at 11-12 [30]:
“The ‘Terms and Conditions’ contains the following statement which emphasises the linking function provided by the website:
‘Set
forth below are the terms and conditions … governing the MP3s4FREE.NET website
located at, or linked to through, the route url www.mp3s4free.net, which may
expand or change from time to time (the “Website”).
…
Sites
Linked from the Website: Links to third-party websites from the Website
are not necessarily under MP3s4FREE´s control … and MP3s4FREE does not intend
any such links to third-party websites to imply MP3s4FREE’s sponsorship
or endorsement thereof.’
(Emphasis
added)
The ‘Disclaimer’ acknowledges the linking function of the website in the following terms:
‘…
When you download a song, you take full responsibility for doing so. None of
the files on this site are stored on our servers. We are just providing
links to remote files.’
(Emphasis added)
The linking function of
the website is also acknowledged in the Privacy Policy in the following terms:
‘External
Links:
This site contains links to other sites.
…
Disclaimer: …This site only
provides links to the according sites and no songs are located on our servers.
… We are not responsible for any damage caused by downloading these files, or
any content posted on this website or linked websites.’”
Referring
to data, including statistics, obtained after the execution of Anton Piller orders (see Anton Piller KG v Manufacturing
Processes Ltd [1976] 1 Ch 55) in October
2003, the primary judge said at 11 [29]:
“The
statistics confirm that the website was a very successful and active website
which attracted internet users from around the world and a significant traffic
from Australian internet users. The largest of the files copied from
E-Talk/Com-Cen’s computer equipment was the log of transactions from the website
for the past 12 days (the Access Log File). The Access Log File indicated that
there were in excess of 5 million separate text entries occurring within a
period of approximately 12 days. The Access Log File contained records of the
IP address or host names used by the computers accessing the website. There
were in excess of 214,000 unique hosts identified, a number of which had the
suffixes “.com.au” (5,676 hosts), “.net.au” (5,738 hosts), “edu.au” (207
hosts), “.gov” (64 hosts) and “.gov.au” (40 hosts). The records also indicated
that requests for searches were made by over 61,000 of the unique hosts during
the 12 day period, constituting in excess of 107,000 searches for names which
matched the recording artists listed in the further amended application filed
on 14 October 2004. The Access Log File also records the requesting by user
computers of the Com-Cen logo that appeared on the website. There were 531,499
entries for the “comcen.gif” file in the Access Log File confirmed as
downloaded to user computers.”
101
From 21 December 2000 until 21 June 2001, Mr
Cooper purchased internet services from Com-Cen in order that it host the
website. Around 21 June 2001, Mr Cooper made an arrangement with Com-Cen,
pursuant to which Com-Cen hosted the website largely for free in return for the
website’s advertising of Com-Cen’s internet services: see Universal Music
at 12 [36].
102
In April 2002, Com-Cen entered into an agreement
with E-Talk, pursuant to which Com-Cen transferred 3,000 of its 4,500 customers
to E-Talk: see Universal Music at 13 [39]. Mr Cooper’s custom was
transferred to E-Talk. Mr Bal was a director and the controlling mind of both
Com-Cen and E-Talk. Mr Takoushis, who was an employee of these companies, was
Mr Cooper’s primary point of contact and assisted him from time to time with
the operation of the website.
103
On 17 October 2003, various Australian record
companies and other entities that were the owners or exclusive licensees of
copyright in sound recordings (referred to below as “the record companies”)
commenced a proceeding in the Court, amongst other things, in respect of
alleged infringements of the Act in operating and hosting the website. They
alleged, amongst other things, that Mr Cooper, E-Talk, Com-Cen, Mr Bal and Mr
Takoushis authorized internet users to make copies of the sound recordings and
the communication of these recordings to the public by the operators of remote
websites. They also alleged these parties infringed copyright as joint
tortfeasors by entering into a common design with internet users to make copies
of the recordings.
104
On 22 December 2005, the primary judge granted
declaratory and injunctive relief against Mr Cooper, E-Talk, Com-Cen and Messrs
Bal and Takoushis. Damages are yet to be assessed: see Universal Music
Australia Pty Ltd Cooper [2005] FCA 1878 (“Universal Music (No 2)”).
I refer to Branson J’s reasons for a more detailed description of these
declarations and injunctions.
105
There are three appeals against some of his
Honour’s orders by (1) Mr Cooper; (2) E-Talk and Mr Bal; and (3) Mr Takoushis
(referred to below as “the appellants”). In particular, the appellants
challenged his Honour’s orders 1 to 6, 13 to 18 and 25 to 30. The appeals were
heard together on 7, 8 and 9 August 2006. Com-Cen did not appeal. All appellants
filed amended notices of appeal at the hearing. With leave, the parties filed
further written submissions after the hearing.
106
Mr Cooper appealed on the grounds that his
Honour erred in finding that, by providing a website with hyperlinks, he
authorized the making of copies of the sound recordings and the communication
to the public of those recordings without the licence of the record companies. E-Talk,
Mr Bal and Mr Takoushis also appealed on the ground that his Honour erred in
declaring that, on the facts as found, they authorized the infringement of
copyright in the sound recordings. In addition, they appealed on the grounds
that his Honour erred in holding that, on the facts as found, they did not fall
within the protection of s 112E of the Act.
107
Broadly stated, the principal issue raised on
the hearing of the appeal was whether or not the primary judge was correct in
holding that the appellants infringed the record companies’ copyright by
authorizing the doing of acts comprised in the copyright referred to in s 85 of
the Act. The appeal largely turns on the meaning of the word ‘authorize’ in s
101(1) of the Act.
the decision of the primary judge
108
Concerning Mr Cooper and the website, the
primary judge found that:
(1) The website was a very successful and active one, which attracted internet users from within and without Australia. The traffic from Australian internet users was “significant”: see Universal Music at 11 [29].
(2) Each page of the website contained hyperlinks to “Privacy Policy”, “Terms and Conditions” and “Disclaimer”, which are set out above at [100]: see Universal Music at 11-12 [30].
(3) Mr Cooper had infringed the record companies’ copyright by making copies of the music sound recordings, which were stored as MP3 files on the hard drive of his computer, by downloading them from the website: see Universal Music at 15 [56]. On appeal, Mr Cooper did not challenge this finding.
(4) There were no sound recordings on the website and there had not been any downloading or transmission of recordings from the website: see Universal Music at 15 [60]. Accordingly, Mr Cooper had not infringed the record companies’ copyright in the recordings by communicating them to the public: see Universal Music at 16 [63] and 17 [66]-[67].
(5) The remote websites made available online and electronically transmitted the music recordings to the public: see Universal Music at 16 [63].
(6) For the purposes of s 22(6) of the Act, Mr Cooper did not “determine”, “formulate” or “create” the content of the remote website from which such communications took place: see Universal Music at 20-21 [74].
(7) The website was “carefully structured”, “highly organised”, and many web pages contained “numerous references to linking and downloading”. The website contained hyperlinks that enabled the internet user to access and download the files on the remote websites: see Universal Music at 20-21 [84]. His Honour continued:
“The website
is clearly designed to - and does - facilitate and enable this infringing
downloading. I am of the view that there is a reasonable inference available
that Cooper, who sought advice as to the establishment and operation of his
website, knowingly permitted or approved the use of his website in this manner
and designed and organised it to achieve this result. In view of the absence of
Cooper from the witness box, without any reasonable explanation apart from a
tactical forensic suggestion that he was not a necessary or appropriate witness
to be called in his own case, I am satisfied that the available inference of
permission or approval by Cooper can more safely and confidently be drawn. Accordingly,
I infer that Cooper has permitted or approved, and thereby authorised, the
copyright infringement by internet users who access his website and also by the
owners or operators of the remote websites from which the infringing recordings
were downloaded.” (Emphasis added.)
(8) It was open to Mr Cooper to prevent these infringements by internet users by removing the hyperlinks from his website or by structuring the website in such a way that the operators of the remote websites could not automatically add hyperlinks to the website without his supervision or control: see Universal Music at 21 [85]. Mr Cooper had control regarding both the internet users accessing his website and the operators of the remote websites who sought to add hyperlinks to his website: see Universal Music at 21 [86].
(9) The disclaimers on the website (see above) did not amount to reasonable steps, within the meaning of s 101(1A)(c) of the Act, to prevent or avoid the doing of the infringing act: see Universal Music at 21 [87]. His Honour added:
“The
disclaimers in fact indicate Cooper’s knowledge of the existence of illegal
MP3s on the internet and the likelihood that at least some of the MP3s to which
the website provided hyperlinks constituted infringing copies of copyright
music and sound recordings. However, no attempt was made by Cooper, when
hyperlinks were submitted to the website, to take any steps to ascertain the
legality of the MP3s to which the hyperlinks related or the identity of the
persons submitting the MP3s.”
(10) Mr Cooper had authorized the
infringement of copyright in the sound recordings, both by the internet users
who downloaded the recordings and by the operators of the remote websites: see Universal
Music at 22 [88]. At 23-24 [100], his Honour concluded that:
“…copyright
subsisted in the sound recordings and…there was a breach of copyright as a
consequence of the communication, both in the sense of electronic transmission
and making available online, of the sound recordings from the remote websites
to the internet users who activated one of the hyperlinks that had been set up
on the website as a direct or indirect consequence of the activities undertaken
by Cooper.…Cooper…breached the Act by reason of authorising acts comprised in
the copyright, in the sense of permitting or sanctioning and facilitating the
infringements of the Act by the internet users who access[ed]
the website and also by the owners or operators of the remote websites from
which the infringing recordings were downloaded.”
(11) Mr Cooper did not engage in trading in the digital music files and was not offering for sale the sound recordings: see Universal Music at 22 [90]-[91] and 24 [101]. He derived a collateral commercial benefit from the sponsorship and funding he received for the advertising material on his website. He used the hyperlinks on the website, and the high traffic of internet users which was generated by these hyperlinks, to procure sponsorship.
(12) Mr Cooper offered encouragement
to internet users to download infringing material, as evidenced by the numerous
references to downloading on the website, and had specifically structured and
arranged the website so as to facilitate this downloading. Accordingly, Mr
Cooper could not rely on s 112E by way of defence: see Universal Music at
23 [99] and 24 [100].
109
As to E-Talk, Com-Cen, and Messrs Bal and
Takoushis, the primary judge relevantly found that:
(1) E-Talk and Com-Cen had not infringed copyright by communicating the sound recordings to the public: see Universal Music at 25 [110].
(2) Mr Bal was the controlling mind of E-Talk and Com-Cen, which was a small, tightly-knit operation under his direction. There were about eight employees working at the same premises in close proximity to one another. Persons working in the office would have been aware of, and discussed, the offer made by Mr Cooper, its acceptance and implementation. Mr Bal would have been keen to ensure that his companies were receiving some benefit in return for hosting the website for free. The provision of these hosting services was a significant source of revenue: see Universal Music at 26 [115]. Mr Bal visited the website prior to the execution of the Anton Piller orders: see Universal Music at 26-27 [116]-[118] and 28 [124]. Mr Bal was aware of the contents of the website and of the copyright problems that were said to arise from its operation. Whilst E-Talk and Com-Cen told Mr Cooper to take the website down to avoid these problems, Mr Bal and Mr Takoushis took no further steps on learning of these problems and the failure of Mr Cooper to address them: see Universal Music at 27 [119]-[120] and 29 [127]. Mr Bal and Mr Takoushis relied on an alleged assurance from Mr Cooper that there was no problem with the website because no music files were actually stored on it: see Universal Music at 29 [127].
(3) E-Talk and Com-Cen were responsible for hosting the website and providing the necessary connection to the internet. They had the power to prevent the doing of the infringing acts. They could have taken the website down but they took no steps to prevent the infringing acts: see Universal Music at 27 [121].
(4) Mr Takoushis, who was a student in information technology until September 1999, had no directorial or managerial function, but was instrumental in setting up the hosting of the website. He communicated with and gave assistance to Mr Cooper in maintaining and operating the site. Mr Takoushis visited the website and was aware of its contents and discussed the website with Mr Bal and Mr Georgiopoulos, who was an employee senior to him, prior to the execution of the Anton Piller orders. He was aware of the probability of legal problems associated with the website before the execution of the Anton Piller orders. Because “he was instrumental in the arrangements for the hosting of the web site and was a contact person with Cooper, who obtained approval from one of Georgiopoulos…or Bal for the free web hosting arrangement…he was more than a mere conduit for communication. He was the person at E-Talk/Com-Cen who was responsible for cooperating with Cooper”: see Universal Music at 28 [123]-[124], 28 [125], 29 [127] and 29 [128].
(5) E-Talk was carrying on the hosting operation of the website during the relevant period. E-Talk and Com-Cen authorized the infringing communication of the sound recordings to the public by the remote websites and the copying of the sound recordings by the internet users who downloaded the files: see Universal Music at 29 [129]-[130].
(6) E-Talk, Com-Cen, and Messrs Bal and Takoushis could not rely on s 112E: see Universal Music at 29 [131].
(7) The primary judge was not satisfied
that there had been an entry into a common design or participation sufficient
to amount to Mr Cooper being a joint tortfeasor “with either internet users and
E-Talk/Com-Cen to make copies of the music sound recordings or to communicate
them to the public”: see Universal Music at 30-31 [137]. Although, on
the findings, Messrs Bal and Takoushis were aware that there was a problem in
relation to the downloading of the sound recordings, it was not established
that there was a sufficient degree of common design or concerted action to make
them joint tortfeasors: see Universal Music at 30-31 [137]. His Honour
also found that E-Talk and Com-Cen were not joint tortfeasors: see Universal
Music at 30-31 [137].
110
The primary judge dismissed the record
companies’ claims that statements on the website amounted to misleading or
deceptive conduct: see Universal Music at 31-33 [138]-[145].
the copyright act
111
A sound recording, as defined in s 10, is not a
“work” within the meaning of the Act. Part IV of the Act, which concerns
copyright in subject-matters that are not works, relates to sound recordings:
see ss 10, 84 and 97. Part IV consists of ss 84 to 113C. Section 85(1) provides
that, for the purposes of the Act, unless the contrary intention appears,
copyright in a sound recording is the exclusive right, amongst other things, to
make a copy of the sound recording and to communicate the recording to the
public: see s 85(1)(a) and (c). A recording is relevantly ‘communicated’ if it
is made available online or electronically transmitted: see s 10. The
expression ‘to the public’ means ‘to the public within or outside Australia’:
see s 10.
112
Section 101 relevantly provides:
“(1) Subject
to this Act, a copyright subsisting by virtue of this Part is infringed by a
person who, not being the owner of the copyright, and without the licence of
the owner of the copyright, does in Australia, or authorizes the doing in
Australia of, any act comprised in the copyright.
(1A) In
determining, for the purposes of subsection (1), whether or not a person
has authorised the doing in Australia of any act comprised in a copyright
subsisting by virtue of this Part without the licence of the owner of the
copyright, the matters that must be taken into account include the following:
(a) the
extent (if any) of the person’s power to prevent the doing of the act
concerned;
(b) the
nature of any relationship existing between the person and the person who did
the act concerned;
(c) whether
the person took any other reasonable steps to prevent or avoid the doing of the
act, including whether the person complied with any relevant industry codes of
practice.
(2) The
next two succeeding sections do not affect the generality of the last preceding
subsection.
(3) Subsection (1)
applies in relation to an act done in relation to a sound recording whether the
act is done by directly or indirectly making use of a record embodying the
recording.
(4) ….”
113
Section 13(1), which falls within the
interpretation provisions of Pt II, provides that a reference in the Act to an
act comprised in the copyright in a work or other subject-matter is a reference
to any act that, under the Act, the owner of the copyright has the exclusive
right to do. Section 13(2) further provides that, for the purposes of the Act,
the exclusive right to do an act in relation to a work or any other
subject-matter includes the exclusive right to authorize a person to do that
act in relation to that work or other subject matter.
114
Consideration of whether the appellants
authorized copyright infringement by hosting Mr Cooper’s website involves
consideration of s 112E, which is in the following terms:
“A person
(including a carrier or carriage service provider) who provides facilities for
making, or facilitating the making of, a communication is not taken to have
authorised any infringement of copyright in an audio‑visual item merely
because another person uses the facilities so provided to do something the
right to do which is included in the copyright.”
The term
‘audio-visual item’ includes a sound recording: see s 100A.
THE PARTIES’ SUBMISSIONS
115
At the hearing of the appeals, senior counsel,
who represented all the appellants, made four preliminary submissions: first,
that the word ‘authorizes’ in s 101(1) must mean ‘purports to authorize’;
secondly, whether or not there has been an authorization is a question of fact;
thirdly, whilst the authorities note various synonyms for the word ‘authorize’,
the synonyms do not resolve the question whether in this case there has been an
authorization; and, fourthly, whilst the authorities state what is not
authorization, these statements provide only peripheral guidance in this case.
116
Relying on Falcon v Famous Players Film
Company [1926] 2 KB 474 at 499 per Atkin LJ, the appellants submitted that
the word ‘authorize’ in s 101(1) must mean doing an act or acts that, if
legally effective, would give lawful permission to do the thing. That is, an
‘authorization’ was more than facilitation and encouragement. The appellants
relied on the fact that the primary judge dismissed the misleading and
deceptive conduct claim against them in support of the proposition that they
had not held themselves out as authorizing the infringing conduct.
117
The appellants also submitted that the primary
judge made no finding that the infringements they had supposedly authorized
were infringements in Australia and that, having regard to the terms of s 101(1),
this was crucial to the case against them. Further, the declarations and
injunctions to which his Honour’s judgment gave rise did not incorporate the
territorial restriction in s 101(1).
Mr Cooper
118
Mr Cooper submitted that whether or not the
provision of a hyperlink constituted authorization depended on the
circumstances of the case. He likened the provision of hyperlinks to a road
sign, which merely pointed the way to another site, from which downloading
could be done. He submitted that the website was, in relevant respects, no
different from other internet search engines, such as Google. Referring to the
disclaimer on the website, he argued that he merely stood by, indifferent to
what visitors to his site might choose to do. He contended that it made no
difference that he knew that the hyperlinks on his website could and would be
used unlawfully. He argued that the decision of a Full Court of this Court in Australasian
Performing Right Association v Jain (1990) 26 FCR 53 (“Jain”) at 61
was wrong in so far as it pointed to a contrary conclusion.
119
Mr Cooper also argued that the MP3 files to
which his website provided links were available independently of his website. He
submitted that he did not have the power to prevent the downloading of these
files; and that he had no relationship with the operators of the remote sites
or with the internet users who chose to download the sound recordings.
Referring to the disclaimers on the website, he further submitted that he had
taken reasonable steps to prevent or avoid copyright infringements. He relied
on s 112E.
120
E-Talk and Mr Bal also relied on s 112E and
further contended that the provision was included in the Act out of an
abundance of caution. They were not, so they said, to be taken to have
authorized infringements of copyright in sound recordings simply because others
misused the facilities they provided. They conceded that the primary judge
found that they had some knowledge of what the website contained. They argued,
however, that it was immaterial that they might have prevented Mr Cooper from
displaying his website. They said that they had no power to prevent the
infringements constituted by internet users’ downloading of sound recordings
stored as MP3 files on remote websites. There was, they said, no relationship
between them and the internet users or operators of remote websites.
121
In detailed written submissions, E-Talk and Mr
Bal contended, amongst other things, that there no sound evidentiary basis for
the primary judge’s finding that, as an internet service provider, E-Talk (and
Mr Bal) had authorized the relevant copyright infringements. They said that
there was no proper foundation for the primary judge’s adverse view of Mr Bal’s
credit.
Mr Takoushis
122
Mr Takoushis relied heavily on the fact, as
found by the primary judge, that he was merely an employee with
responsibilities for technical matters. He submitted that his Honour erred in
finding that a person in his position could be taken to authorize copyright
infringements. He further submitted that, bearing in mind that he had no
control or policy-making role, he did nothing more than provide technical
support for the website and, when problems arose, took instruction from his
superiors. He was, so he said, a mere functionary.
123
The record companies commenced oral argument
first by submitting that the website operated by Mr Cooper was not analogous to
a general search engine because the only purpose of the website was to
facilitate the downloading of sound recordings stored as MP3 files on remote
computers. They submitted that Mr Cooper’s appeal had a narrow focus and did
not challenge the underlying findings of fact. They argued that the law in
Australia attributed a wide meaning to the word ‘authorize’ in this context;
and the appellants’ attempt to narrow the concept of authorization was
inconsistent with the decision of the High Court in The University of New
South Wales v Moorehouse (1975) 133 CLR 1 (“Moorehouse”).
124
According to the record companies, infringements
occurred in Australia in consequence of the remote website operators
transmitting and communicating the recordings in Australia. It was reasonably
to be inferred from the nature of the popular songs that were catalogued on the
website operated by Mr Cooper that most, if not all, were the subject of
copyright. They submitted that, in the context of the case, including the
structure of the site and its subject matter, there was an “inescapable
inference…that every download…absent some other evidence…would infringe
copyright”.
125
The record companies argued that Mr Cooper
authorized a specific transmission that occurred as a direct consequence of
activating the hyperlink on the website. Mr Cooper was, so they said, in a
position to ensure that the sound recordings stored in the MP3 files accessed
by the hyperlinks on the website were not transmitted over this path. The
record companies argued that Mr Cooper had a direct relationship with the
operators of the remote websites and internet users. They contended that the
findings of the primary judge as to the nature and structure of the website
gave rise to a reasonable inference that Mr Cooper knowingly permitted the use
of the website for infringing downloading. The primary judge was, so they said,
entitled to have regard to the fact that Mr Cooper did not give evidence. The
record companies also contended that Mr Cooper did not present any coherent
statement of the rights of internet users in relation to the downloading of
sound recordings.
126
The record companies also submitted that, by
connecting the website to the internet, E-Talk authorized copyright
infringements by internet users. Further, they relied on the fact that E-Talk
and Com-Cen advertised internet services on the website, both on webpages and
via hyperlink, and enjoyed the financial benefits of their association with the
website. They referred to Jain and the primary judge’s findings about Mr
Bal and E-Talk, submitting that his Honour’s ultimate conclusion about their
liability was correct.
127
Similarly, the record companies contended that
the primary judge’s findings supported his ultimate finding with respect to Mr
Takoushis. Although they accepted that he did not have a managerial role in the
business of E-Talk, they submitted that Mr Takoushis had a degree of
discretion, the ear of Mr Bal, and was instrumental in setting up Mr Cooper’s
website. This was enough, so they said, to justify his Honour’s ultimate
finding with respect to Mr Takoushis.
128
Finally, the record companies contended that his
Honour erred in not finding that each of E-Talk, Mr Bal and Mr Takoushis was
party to a common design with Mr Cooper so as to render them liable as joint
tortfeasors. They relied on the findings of fact made by the primary judge in
relation to the knowing involvement of each of these appellants in Mr Cooper’s
infringements of copyright. They argued that his Honour took too narrow a view
of what constitutes “common design or concerted action to make them joint
tortfeasors”. Each of the appellants refuted this contention.
The parties’ supplementary submissions
129
In supplementary submissions filed on 16 August
2006 pursuant to leave granted on 9 August 2006, the record companies
“object[ed] to [the appellants] being granted leave to raise issues as to proof
of infringements in Australia (including the application of s 104) and the form
of orders”. The bases for their objection were that neither issue was the
subject of any ground of appeal; the record companies deliberately confined
their approach to the appeals because of their narrow ambit; and the new issues
would require more extended consideration of material before the primary judge
than had hitherto been necessary.
130
The record companies said:
“Mr Cooper
did make a general submission before the primary Judge to the effect that there
was no evidence of infringements in Australia; however, his assertions in this
regard…were obviously wrong. There was evidence of infringements in Australia.
The fact
that his Honour did not deal expressly with that general submission reflects
the fundamental weakness in the argument as opposed to any weakness in the
primary Judge’s judgment.”
131
The record companies stated that s 104, which
was not raised as a ground of appeal, was also not raised before the primary
judge. Had it been raised, it would have led to a factual inquiry that, as it
happened, was never undertaken. Further, if leave were given to the appellants,
then the record companies sought leave to amend their notice of contention to
agitate the question whether Mr Cooper was a joint tortfeasor in the acts of
the operators of the remote servers to which his website had links. The record
companies accepted that an amended form of orders might nonetheless be made.
132
In responsive submissions filed on 24 August
2006, the appellants argued that no leave was sought or required to raise
issues as to proof of infringements in Australia, including s 104. They
contended that “[i]f the Record Companies are to be permitted to salvage what
they can of the orders made by the primary Judge – even by recasting those
orders so as to provide a territorial limitation which is presently totally
lacking – they can hardly deny the Appellants the opportunity to argue that the
proposed amendments cannot be sustained without some evidentiary foundation
that something (relevant) happened in Australia.” The appellants also stated
that the contention that the record companies foreshadowed that they would wish
to raise by amendment to their notice of contention was not pleaded nor
otherwise explored at trial.
133
Notwithstanding the appellants’ opposition, the
Court subsequently permitted the record companies to file further supplementary
submissions. It also received the appellants’ further supplementary submissions
in response.
consideration
134
Section 101(1) creates two kinds of
infringements: the first is the doing in Australia of any act comprised in the
copyright by a person not being the owner of the copyright and without the
licence of the owner of the copyright; and the second, the authorizing
(again by a person not being the owner of the copyright and without the licence
of the owner of the copyright) of the doing in Australia of any act comprised
in the copyright. These appeals are primarily concerned with the meaning of
‘authorization’ in s 101. Each kind of infringement created by s 101(1) has a
territorial connection to Australia. In the first case, there must be the
doing in Australia of an act comprised in the copyright and, in the second
case, there must be the authorizing of the doing in Australia of an act
of the same description. Section 101(1) will be attracted in the latter case if
the act of infringement that is authorized is done in Australia, though the
‘authorization’ took place outside Australia. That is, s 101 operates so as to
exclude the ordinary presumption that a Commonwealth Act is concerned only with
conduct in Australia: see s 21 of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901
(Cth). The question whether or not the primary judge adverted to the need for a
relevant territorial connection and the extent of the evidence for it assumed
additional significance in submissions filed after the hearing of the appeal. I
return to this matter below at [175]-[176].
135
Section 101(1A) was introduced into the Act by
the Copyright Amendment (Digital Agenda) Act 2000 (Cth) (“the Copyright
Amendment Act”), an object of which was to provide “a practical enforcement
regime for copyright owners” in the online environment: see s 3 of the
Copyright Amendment Act. Presumably, the provision has particular significance
in the context of alleged infringements of s 101(1) across the internet. Section
101(1A) requires that certain matters must be taken into account in
determining whether a person has authorized the doing of an infringing act in
Australia contrary to s 101(1). Section 101(1A) does not, however, prevent the
Court from taking into account other relevant considerations. Whether one
person has authorized another to commit an infringement will depend on the
circumstances of the case: compare Moorehouse at 12 per Gibbs J and 17
per Jacobs J (with whom McTiernan ACJ agreed).
Authorization
136
Section 101(1A) was enacted at a time when Moorehouse
represented the Australian law with respect to ‘authorization’. Before the
introduction of s 101(1A) into the Act, any discussion of the concept of
authorization began with Moorehouse. Today, reference to Moorehouse
assists in construing s 101(1A) because, as the following discussion shows, s
101(1A) is premised on the concept of ‘authorization’ developed by the High
Court in that case.
137
Moorehouse
concerned the circumstances in which literary copyright was infringed by the
making of photocopies in a library at the University. Jacobs J, with whom
McTiernan J agreed, said, at 20:
“The question is whether in the circumstances of the case the appellant
in supplying the book from its library and in providing a machine at the
library
which would enable copies to be made authorized the infringement. The answer
depends upon the meaning of the word ‘authorize’ in s 36(1) of [the Act] and on a conclusion of fact once the meaning of the word
is ascertained.”
Jacobs
J drew a distinction between ‘authority’ and ‘authorization’. The latter was a
broader concept than the former. Like Gibbs J in his separate judgment, Jacobs
J attributed to the word ‘authorization’ the meaning of ‘sanction, approve,
countenance’. Jacobs J observed, at 20-21:
“It is established that the word is not limited to the authorizing of an
agent by a principal. Where there is such an authority the act of the agent
is the act of the principal and thus the principal himself may be said to do the
act comprised in the copyright. But authorization is wider than authority. It
has, in relation to a similar use in previous copyright legislation, been given the meaning, taken from the Oxford Dictionary, of ‘sanction, approve,
countenance’…It is a wide meaning which in cases of permission or
invitation is apt to apply both where an express permission or invitation
is extended to do the act comprised in the copyright and where such a permission or invitation may be implied. Where a general permission
or
invitation may be implied it is clearly unnecessary that the authorizing party
have knowledge that a particular act comprised in the copyright will be done.”
Jacobs
J held that in the circumstances of the case the University had impliedly
invited the users of the library to use the photocopiers as they thought fit,
including committing copyright infringements.
138
Gibbs J also said, at 12, that, in legislation
“of similar intendment”, the word ‘authorize’ had been held to mean ‘sanction,
approve, countenance’ or even ‘permit’. His Honour added that “[a] person
cannot be said to authorize an infringement of copyright unless he has some
power to prevent it”: see Moorehouse at 12. Gibbs J continued, at 12-13,
that:
“Express or
formal permission or sanction, or active conduct indicating approval, is not
essential to constitute an authorization…However, the word ‘authorize’ connotes
a mental element and it could not be inferred that a person had, by mere
inactivity, authorized something to be done if he neither knew nor had reason
to suspect that the act might be done.…[A] person who
has under his control the means by which an infringement of copyright may be
committed - such as a photocopying machine - and who makes it available to
other persons, knowing, or having reason to suspect, that it is likely to be
used for the purpose of committing an infringement, and omitting to take
reasonable steps to limit its use to legitimate purposes, would authorize any
infringement that resulted from its use.”
Gibbs
J held that the University did not adopt measures reasonably sufficient for the
purpose of preventing infringements taking place and that in the circumstances
an infringement resulting from the use of the University’s photocopier was
relevantly authorized by the University: see Moorehouse at 17.
139
In WEA International Inc v Hanimex
Corporation Ltd (1987) 17 FCR 274 (“WEA International Inc”), which
also concerned infringement of copyright in sound recordings, Gummow J
considered the history of the concept of ‘authorization’ in Australian law. His
Honour noted and concluded at 285-286:
“The
evolution of the meaning of ‘authorisation’ in [the Copyright
Act 1911 (UK)] and [the
Act]
has pursued an even more tortuous course than the doctrine of contributory
infringement in the United States. One view of the 1911 Act was that the
expression ‘to authorise’ described a situation where the defendant purported
to confer on a third party, for example as an agent or licensee, a right or
authority to perform an activity which in truth would be, if carried out, an
infringement of the plaintiff’s copyright: Transatlantic
Film Co Ltd v Albion Cinema Supplies Co [1917-23] MacG CC 118
at 121; Finn v Pugliese (1918) 18 SR (NSW) 530 at 541; Evans v E Hulton and Co Ltd (1924) 131 LT 534; Falcon v Famous Players Film Co [1926] 2 KB 474 at 499.
This would have given to ‘authorisation’ a conceptually distinct field of
operation from that of principles of joint tortfeasance.
…
But the
course of authority has shown that the concept of ‘authorisation’ is not so
confined. In Moorehouse’s case…the High Court, following Adelaide Corporation v Australasian Performing Right Association Ltd (1928) 40
CLR 481 at 489, accepted that the word ‘authorised’ as used in s 36 of [the Act] had the meaning of ‘sanction, approve, countenance’. This
meant that express or formal permission or active conduct indicating approval
was not essential to constitute authorisation.”
140
The appellants have contended for a narrow
concept of ‘authorization’, which, as this passage from Gummow J’s judgment in WEA
International Inc shows, was rejected by the High Court in Moorehouse
and Adelaide Corporation v Australasian Performing Right Association Ltd (1928)
40 CLR 481 (“Adelaide Corporation”). The proposition that the concept of
‘authorization’ is to be understood in the narrow way for which the appellants
contended is incompatible with these authorities: see also Jain at 57
per Sheppard, Foster and Hill JJ. For this reason, I reject the appellants’
submissions in this regard.
Relevant considerations
141
Prior to the introduction of s 101(1A), the
authorities identified various considerations as being relevant to the issue of
‘authorization’ as developed by the High Court. In Moorehouse, the High
Court identified as relevant the degree of control over and the nature of the
relationship between the alleged authorizer and the person supposedly
authorized to do the directly infringing act: see also Adelaide Corporation
at 497 per Higgins J and 503 per Gavan Duffy and Starke JJ and Australian
Tape Manufacturers Association Ltd v Commonwealth (1993) 176 CLR 480 (“Australian
Tape Manufacturers”) at 497-498 per Mason CJ and Brennan, Deane and Gaudron
JJ. Gibbs J in Moorehouse also identified as a relevant consideration
the knowledge or reasonable suspicion of the authorizer that the infringing act
would be done: see also Adelaide Corporation at 487 per Knox CJ in
dissent. Building on this idea, the High Court in Australian Tape
Manufacturers at 498 said that the “[m]anufacture and sale of articles such
as blank tapes or video recorders, which have lawful uses, do not constitute
authorization of infringement of copyright, even if the manufacturer or vendor
knows that there is a likelihood that the articles will be used for an
infringing purpose such as home taping of sound recordings, so long as the
manufacturer or vendor has no control over the purchaser’s use of the article.”
142
The question what degree of control can constitute
a sufficient basis for a finding of authorization does not admit of a
straightforward answer. As the authorities show, it will be a question of fact
and degree in each case.
143
In Adelaide Corporation, a majority of
the High Court held that a lessor of a hall had not ‘permitted’ the lessee to
perform songs in a concert in breach of copyright, notwithstanding that that
the lessor was told that the proposed program would infringe copyright and did
nothing to dissuade the lessees from performing the songs. In a passage
referred to in Moorehouse, Gavan Duffy and Starke JJ at 504 cited Performing
Right Society v Ciryl Theatrical Syndicate [1924] 1 KB 1 at 9 per Bankes LJ
in support of the proposition that:
“Mere
inactivity or failure to take some steps to prevent the performance of the work
does not necessarily establish permission. Inactivity or ‘indifference,
exhibited by acts of commission or omission, may reach a degree from which an
authorization or permission may be inferred…’”
144
Nationwide News Pty Ltd v Copyright Agency
Ltd (1996) 65 FCR 399 (“Nationwide News”)
considered the relationship between control, knowledge and inactivity, albeit
in obiter dicta. In a passage on which the appellants relied, Sackville
J, with whom Jenkinson and Burchett JJ agreed, said at 422 that “a person does
not authorise an infringement merely because he or she knows that another
person might infringe the copyright and takes no step to prevent infringement”.
Referring, amongst other cases, to Adelaide Corporation and Australian
Tape Manufacturers, his Honour added at 424 that “[k]nowledge that a breach
of copyright is likely to occur does not necessarily amount to authorisation,
even if the person having that knowledge could take steps to prevent the
infringement”.
145
On the one hand, mere inactivity or indifference
will be insufficient, especially where there is no knowledge or reason to
suspect that the infringement might occur. On the other hand, inactivity or
indifference, coupled with other factors, may support an inference of
authorization. In Jain, the combination of inactivity, knowledge and
control led the Full Court to uphold the finding at first instance that a
company’s chief executive officer had authorized the infringement of copyright
that occurred in the unlicensed performance of musical works in a hotel owned
by the company. The chief executive officer, who was also a director, was not
involved in the daily operations of the hotel. The company employed a manager
to select and arrange performances. In upholding the finding below, the Full
Court emphasised that the finding of authorization was one of fact. It said at
61-62:
“The
judgment of the High Court in the Moorehouse case
establishes that one of the meanings of the word ‘authorise’ in the context in
which it is here used is ‘countenance’. It may be that not every act which
amounts to the countenancing of something is an authorisation. Every case will
depend on its own facts. Matters of degree are involved. But the evidence in
the present case reveals, in our opinion, a studied and deliberate course of
action in which Mr Jain decided to ignore the appellant’s rights and to allow a
situation to develop and to continue in which he must have known that it was
likely that the appellant’s music would be played without any licence from it. It
was within his power to control what was occurring but he did nothing at all. In
those circumstances we have reached the conclusion that the appellant
established that Mr Jain authorised the infringement of copyright in question contrary
to s 36 of the Act.”
For
decisions to like effect, see Australasian Performing Right Association Ltd
v Canterbury-Bankstown League Club Ltd [1964-5] NSWR 138 (“Canterbury-Bankstown”)
at 140 per Ferguson J with whom Heron CJ agreed and Australasian Performing
Right Association Ltd v Metro on George Pty Ltd (2004) 210 ALR 244 (“Metro
on George”) at 252 per Bennett J.
146
As such cases as Jain and Canterbury-Bankstown
emphasize, prior to s 101(1A), an alleged authorizer’s failure to take
reasonable steps to prevent the infringing act that the person knows, or had
reason to suspect, would be, or would be likely to be, done was also treated as
a consideration relevant to a finding of authorization: see also Metro on
George at 259.
147
The Court is now required by s 101(1A) to
consider three matters that the authorities had previously identified as
relevant to the High Court’s concept of ‘authorization’. These factors are: (1)
the extent (if any) of the person’s power to prevent the doing of the
infringing act; (2) the nature of the relationship between the alleged
authorizer and the person who did the infringing act that was supposedly
authorized; and (3) whether the alleged authorizer took reasonable steps to
prevent or avoid that infringing act.
The extent (if any) of Mr Cooper’s power to prevent the
doing of the infringing act
148
Bearing in mind the findings of the primary
judge that were not challenged on appeal, the hyperlinks on the website
operated by Mr Cooper permitted an internet user to access the sound recordings
stored in the MP3 files on remote computers. Every time an internet user
activated a link on the website, which was effective to download a sound
recording in Australia that was stored on a remote computer, there was an
infringing act. Mr Cooper created and operated the website. He could have
prevented these infringing acts, either by not establishing the link in the
first place or, subsequently, by disabling or removing the link. The fact that
internet users could make other online copies of the sound recordings by other
means does not detract from the fact that there were infringements as a
consequence of effective activations of the links on the website operated by Mr
Cooper.
149
In the circumstances, it was not reasonably open
to Mr Cooper to claim mere indifference to the use internet users made of the
website. The findings at first instance as to the nature, the contents and
structure of the website, which were not seriously contested, plainly supported
the further finding that Mr Cooper deliberately designed the website to
facilitate infringing downloading of sound recordings. Mr Cooper’s position
was, in this respect, entirely different from that of the manufacturers and
vendors of blank tapes, which was considered in Australian Tape Manufacturers.
The nature of the relationship between Mr Cooper and the
internet user and operators of remote websites
150
There was no error in the primary judge’s
finding that Mr Cooper established a relationship between him and the remote
website operators when he created the facility for them to put links on the
website that he operated. This was a relevant and direct relationship. Mr
Cooper also created relationships with relevant internet users when he provided
facilities to initiate direct downloading of the sound recordings at these
remote websites. The existence of a relevant relationship is also supported by
the primary judge’s finding that Mr Cooper derived financial advantage from it.
That is, he was able to enter into commercial arrangements on account of
internet users’ patronage.
Whether Mr Cooper took reasonable steps to prevent or avoid
that infringing act
151
The finding made by the primary judge entitled
him to conclude that Mr Cooper did not take reasonable steps to prevent or
avoid the infringements that occurred in the downloading of sound recordings. His
Honour found, and it is not disputed, that the disclaimers did not accurately
state the law and that Mr Cooper did not take any steps “to ascertain the
legality of the MP3s to which the hyperlinks related or the identity of the
persons submitting the MP3s”: see Universal Music at 21 [87].
Conclusions with respect to Mr Cooper
152
So far as internet users and remote website
operators were concerned, the website was in substance an invitation to use the
hyperlinks provided and to add new links in order that sound recordings could
be downloaded from remote websites, and a principal purpose of the website was
to enable infringing copies of the downloaded sound recordings to be made. The
fact that the website also carried a warning that some downloading could be
illegal did not lessen the force of the invitation. Mr Cooper countenanced the
specific infringing downloading and copying that occurred as a direct
consequence of activating the hyperlink on the website operated by him. For the
reasons stated below at [168]-[170], Mr Cooper’s activities took him outside
the protection of s 112E.
153
I agree with Branson J that Mr Cooper authorized
the infringement in Australia of the record companies’ copyright in sound
recording by authorizing internet users to make copies of sound recordings in
which copyright subsisted, and operators of remote websites to communicate
these sound recordings to the public.
The extent (if any) of E-Talk’s power to prevent the doing
of the infringing act
154
I reject the submission made on behalf of E-Talk
and Mr Bal that there was no proper foundation for the primary judge’s adverse
view of Mr Bal. His Honour’s reasons for judgment reveal an adequate
foundation. I also reject the submission that that there an insufficient
evidentiary basis for the primary judge’s finding that E-Talk and Mr Bal
authorized the relevant copyright infringements.
155
E-Talk connected the website operated by Mr
Cooper to the internet. Had it declined to provide connection services,
transmissions that led to infringing downloading by internet users from files
available at remote websites would have been prevented, as well as the
communication to the public of recordings by remote website operators without the
licence of the record companies. Had Mr Cooper persuaded another service
provider to connect the website to the internet, different transmissions would
presumably have resulted in other infringements. This is not, however, to the
point. The fact is that E-Talk could have prevented the infringements that
actually occurred.
The nature of the relationship between E-Talk and the
internet user and operators of remote computers
156
There was no immediate relationship between
E-Talk and the internet users who visited the website operated by Mr Cooper,
although E-Talk advertised its services on the website and thereby sought to
attract these users’ custom. The opportunity to so advertise conferred a
financial advantage, as is evident from the fact that E-Talk hosted the website
largely for free in return for the opportunity to advertise. I differ from
Branson J in that I would place some weight on this factor, whilst her Honour
would place none. I would not place much weight on it, however.
Whether E-Talk took reasonable steps to prevent or avoid
infringing acts
157
E-Talk could have taken down the website itself.
It could have declined to provide its host facilities. E-Talk did not, however,
take any further steps to prevent the infringing acts after Mr Cooper failed to
comply with its request to take the website down, even though it, through Mr
Bal, knew the contents of the website and the copyright problems that arose
from its operation.
Conclusions with respect to E-Talk
158
In the circumstances of this case, E-Talk countenanced
the infringing downloadings by internet users who visited the website that it
hosted and Mr Cooper operated. For the reasons stated below at [168]-[170], its
activities were outside the protection of s 112E.
The position of Mr Bal
159
In WEA International Inc Gummow J said at
283:
“Where the
infringer is a corporation questions frequently arise as to the degree of
involvement on the part of directors necessary for them to be rendered
personally liable. Those questions are not immediately answered by principles
dealing with ‘authorisation’ or joint tortfeasance. Rather, recourse is to be
had to the body of authority which explains the circumstances in which an
officer of a corporation is personally liable for the torts of the
corporation”.
160
The law concerning the liability of directors
and other officers for corporate wrongdoings is unclear: see Allen
Manufacturing Co Pty Ltd v McCallum & Co Pty Ltd (2001) 53 IPR
400 (“Allen Manufacturing”) at 409-411 per Wilcox, French and Dowsett
JJ. There are two relevant lines of authority, each supportive of a different
test. As the Full Court said in Allen Manufacturing at 409:
“One line
supported…the ‘Performing Right Society test’: whether
the director had ‘directed or procured’ the company’s infringement. The other
line supported ‘the Mentmore test’: whether the
director had engaged in ’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’.”
161
No Full Court of this Court has settled which of
these two tests is to be preferred: see Allen Manufacturing at 410-411
and Sydneywide Distributors Pty Ltd v Red Bull Australia Pty Ltd [2002]
FCAFC 157 (“Sydneywide”) at [160]-[161] per Weinberg and Dowsett JJ. In Root
Quality Pty Ltd v Root Control Technologies Pty Ltd (2000) 177 ALR 231 (“Root
Quality”), Finkelstein J discussed both tests and concluded at 268 [46]
that “[t]he director’s conduct must be such that it can be said of him that he
was so personally involved in the commission of the unlawful act that it is
just that he should be rendered liable.” I tend to agree with his Honour’s
approach: compare also Universal Music at [134].
162
As we have seen, however, counsel for the record
companies did not confine their case against Mr Bal to his role as director,
and contended that his conduct was such as to make him personally liable for
infringement by authorization for the purposes of s 101(1). They made the same
contention with respect to Mr Takoushis.
163
Mr Bal was plainly liable for the wrongdoing of
the company, whether the Performing Right Society test or the
Mentmore test (Mentmore Manufacturing Co Ltd v National Merchandising
Manufacturing Co Inc (1978) 89 DLR (Ed) 195) is adopted, or, indeed, the
approach in Root Quality is preferred. Mr Bal directed and procured
E-Talk’s authorization, in circumstances where he knew about the contents of
the website and the copyright difficulties to which the website gave rise. He
knew that, by hosting the site, E-Talk was permitting internet users to
download and copy sound recordings in which copyright subsisted. He consented
to the arrangement entered into between his companies and Mr Cooper, whereby
they advertised on the website in return for largely free hosting. Through his
companies, he sought to derive financial benefit from the internet users’ use
of the website. Mr Bal took no steps to prevent the infringing acts after Mr
Cooper failed to comply with E-Talk’s request to take the website down,
although, as the controlling mind of E-Talk, he could have caused E-Talk itself
to take the website down or decline to continue to host the site.
164
Furthermore, the Full Court in Jain
accepted that the liability of a director or other officer does not solely
depend on the principles referred to in Allen Manufacturing, Sydneywide
and Root Quality: that is, a director procuring an infringement may also
be liable on the basis that his or her conduct amounts to an ‘authorization’
for the purposes of s 101(1). Upon this basis, Mr Bal also authorized
infringements by internet users in the same way as E-Talk did. The fact is that
Mr Bal could have prevented the infringements that actually occurred by causing
E-Talk not to host the website operated by Mr Cooper. Mr Bal had no immediate
relationship with the internet users who visited the website but, through his
companies, he derived a commercial advantage from the opportunity to advertise
on the website. Mr Bal took no steps to prevent the infringements after Mr
Cooper failed to comply with the request to take his website down, even though
he knew the contents of the website and the copyright problems that arose from
its operation.
165
For the reasons stated below at [168]-[170], his
activities were outside the protection of s 112E.
The position of Mr Takoushis
166
E-Talk employed Mr Takoushis to provide
technical support. He did little more than this. He had no control over the
company’s affairs and no policy-making role in the company. When problems arose
or a decision affecting the company needed to be made, he went to his
superiors.
167
Plainly enough, Mr Takoushis could not be held
liable for the wrongdoing of the company on the Performing Right Society
test or the Mentmore test, or, indeed, on the Root Quality approach.
Further, he could not, on the facts found by the primary judge, be liable
as a person who ‘authorized’ either the infringing downloading of sound
recordings by internet users or the communication of these recordings to the
public by the operators of the remote websites. Let it be accepted that Mr
Takoushis knew the contents of the website operated by Mr Cooper and that it
was likely to give rise to infringements of copyright in the recordings to
which it was providing links. Such knowledge was insufficient to attract
liability. Mr Takoushis was unable to cause E-Talk to take down the website and
discontinue its hosting arrangements with Mr Cooper. Mr Takoushis had no
relationship of his own with internet users or operators of remote websites. His
superiors, such as Mr Bal, already knew about the website operated by Mr Cooper
and the copyright difficulties to which it was likely to give rise; and there
was no other reasonable step that he could take to prevent the infringements. In
these circumstances, Mr Takoushis cannot be said to have relevantly
‘authorized’ the doing in Australia of acts infringing the record companies’
copyright.
The protection of s 112E not available to the appellants
168
In order for s 112E to apply, there must be a
person providing facilities “for making, or facilitating the making of, a
communication”. The appellants fall within this description. By force of s
112E, such a person is not to be taken to have authorized an infringement
“merely because” another person uses the facilities in such a way as to infringe
copyright. That is, if the most that can be said is that they have provided the
facilities another person has used to infringe copyright, they are not to be
taken to have authorized the infringement. As Wilcox J said in Universal
Music Australia Pty Ltd v Sharman License Holdings Ltd [2005] FCA 1242 at
[396], “[s]o understood, s 112E operates as a legislative reversal of the High
Court’s decision in Telstra Corporation Limited v Australasian Performing
Right Association Limited (1997) 191 CLR 140”. As his Honour noted at
[399], s 112E “does not preclude the possibility that a person who falls within
the section may be held, for other reasons, to be an authoriser”. Whether there
are “other reasons” depends on the matters identified in s 101(1A) and any other
relevant matters.
169
As already stated, the website constituted an
invitation by Mr Cooper to internet users to use the hyperlinks that it
provided and to add new links, in order that sound recordings could be
downloaded from remote computers and thereby copied. Having regard to the
matters already mentioned with respect to Mr Cooper, it cannot be said that he
did no more than provide the facilities that were used to infringe the record
companies’ copyright.
170
Nor can it be said that E-Talk and Mr Bal did no
more than provide the facilities that were used to infringe the record
companies’ copyright. E-Talk, and, through E-Talk, Mr Bal, derived a commercial
advantage from the website operated by Mr Cooper that was over and above
payment for hosting services. Mr Bal, and through him, E-Talk knew about the
website and the infringements of copyright that were likely to be committed
through its operation. In that knowledge, neither took reasonable steps to
prevent the infringements.
Notices of contention
171
In each appeal, the record companies have filed
notices of contention. I have had the benefit of reading in draft the reasons
for judgment of Branson J. I agree with her Honour, for the reasons she gives,
that the contentions sought to be raised in the appeals of Mr Cooper and E-Talk
and Mr Bal should not be further considered.
172
I also agree with her Honour that only two of
the contentions sought to be raised in the appeal of Mr Takoushis are
appropriately raised. The first is the contention that Mr Takoushis was a joint
tortfeasor with Mr Cooper, E-Talk and Com-Cen; and the second is that Mr
Takoushis directed or procured the acts of E-Talk and Com-Cen whereby the
record companies’ copyright was infringed or deliberately or recklessly
directed the commission of those acts so as to make the conduct his own. I have
already considered this latter contention at [167].
173
The circumstance that two or more persons
assisted in or contributed to a tortious act causing damage is insufficient to
attract liability as joint tortfeasors. There must also be some common design:
see Morton-Norwich Products Inc v Intercen Ltd [1978] RPC 501 at 515-516
per Graham J; also WEA International Inc at 283 per Gummow J. As Brennan
CJ, Dawson and Toohey JJ said in Thompson v Australian Capital Television
Pty Ltd (1996) 186 CLR 574 at 580-581, after considering the position of
principal and agent and persons who breach joint duties, “to constitute joint
tortfeasors two or more persons must act in concert in committing the tort”.
174
In the circumstances previously discussed with
reference to Mr Takoushis, I can discern no error in the primary judge’s
finding that there was insufficient evidence of common design. As already
noted, within E-Talk, Mr Takoushis was employed to provide little more than
technical support. I reject the proposition that he had authority to terminate
the hosting arrangement that existed between E-Talk and Mr Cooper. His role in
providing technical support in establishing and maintaining the website, and
his knowledge of the website and the copyright infringements to which it was
likely to give rise, are insufficient to amount, in the circumstances, to
common design.
The doing in Australia of acts comprised in the copyright
175
An authorization infringement under s 101(1) is
not complete unless there is an act of infringement of the kind allegedly
authorized (that is, the doing in Australia of any act comprised in the
copyright): see Nationwide News at 421 per Sackville J, with whom
Jenkinson and Burchett JJ agreed, and the authorities there cited. The Court
may, however, enjoin a defendant in an appropriate case in respect of an
authorization where the act of infringement that is the subject of the
authorization is apprehended quia timet: see WEA International Inc
at 288. There was no basis in this case for quia timet injunctive
relief.
176
The primary judge found that the website
operated by Mr Cooper “attracted internet users from around the world and
a significant traffic from Australian internet users”: see Universal Music
at 11 [29]. His Honour expanded on this finding by reference to what he termed
the ‘Access Log File’. It is implicit in his Honour’s reasons that he regarded
this as tantamount to a finding that acts had been done in Australia that were
comprised in the record companies’ copyright and that these acts were the
subject of the relevant authorizations. In the circumstances of the case, the
primary judge was not required to deal with this point in any greater detail
than he did: see Kovan Engineering (Aust) Pty Ltd v Gold Peg International
Pty Ltd [2006] FCAFC 117 at [45]-[48] per Heerey and Weinberg JJ, with whom
Allsop J substantially agreed and Huntsman Chemical Company Australia Ltd v
International Pools Australia Ltd (1995) 36 NSWLR 242 at 244 per Kirby P
and 256-258 per Mahoney JA. None of the notices of appeal challenged his
Honour’s judgment and orders on the ground that there was no evidence to
support such a finding. Nor did they contest his Honour’s judgment on the
ground that it depended this finding, and that his Honour did not make it and
was unable do so. The appellants have said that they do not seek leave to raise
any issue as to proof of infringements in Australia (including the application
of s 104 of the Act). It follows that no issue as to proof of infringements in
Australia properly arises in these appeals.
DISPOSITION OF THE APPEALS
177
For the reasons stated, I would allow the appeal
of Mr Takoushis and dismiss the appeals of Mr Cooper, E-Talk and
Mr Bal, although in the case of Mr Cooper, E-Talk and Mr Bal I
would vary the declarations and injunctions that the primary judge has made in
the manner proposed by Branson J.
178 I agree with her Honour that Mr Cooper, E-Talk Communications and Mr Bal should pay the record companies’ costs of their appeals. The record companies should pay Mr Takoushis costs at first instance and on appeal.