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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Patents County Court >> Temple Island Collections Ltd v New English Teas Ltd & Anor [2012] EWPCC 1 (12 January 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWPCC/2012/1.html Cite as: [2012] EWPCC 1 |
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7 Rolls Buildings London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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TEMPLE ISLAND COLLECTIONS LIMITED |
Claimant |
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-and - |
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(1) NEW ENGLISH TEAS LIMITED (2) NICHOLAS JOHN HOUGHTON |
Defendants |
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Hearing date: 28th November 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
His Honour Judge Birss QC :
The basic facts
The rival arguments
The trial
The Law
Subsistence of copyright
In accordance with more recent jurisdiction of the finding Senate, photographs are to be considered photographic works in the sense of s.3(2) UrhG (Copyright Law), if they are the result of the creator's own intellectual creation, with no specific measure of originality being required. What is decisive is that an individual allocation between photograph and photographer is possible in so far as the latter's personality is reflected by the arrangements (motif, visual angle, illumination, etc.) selected by him. Such freedom of creation does certainly exist not only for professional photographers with regard to works claiming a high artistic level, but also for a lot of amateur photographers, who take pictures of everyday scenes in the form of photos of landscapes, persons and holiday pictures; also, such photographs shall be deemed photographic works, as far as the arrangements used cause distinctiveness. This criterion of distinctiveness is already met, if it can be said that another photographer may have arranged the photograph differently […]. The two-dimensional reproduction of an object found in nature is considered to have the character of a work in the sense of copyright law, if one's task of achieving a representation as true to nature as possible still leaves ample room for an individual arrangement […].
(Paragraph 2 1. of the judgment. References have been omitted.)
i) Residing in specialities of angle of shot, light and shade, exposure and effects achieved with filters, developing techniques and so on;
ii) Residing in the creation of the scene to be photographed;
iii) Deriving from being in the right place at the right time.
Infringement of copyright
Analysis of the case
Independent creation?
10. Reviewing the matter in court, a measure of clarity emerged, the upshot being that defendants deny infringement but they do not advance a case of independent design. They contend that the question of infringement can be decided objectively, considering two matters, first taking care about what exactly is original about the claimant's copyright work and second by conducting an objective comparison between the Tea Bag Tin Image and the 2005 Work. They contend that Mr Houghton's intention when he set out in February 2010 to produce a new red bus image was to avoid producing a substantial reproduction of the 2005 Work but they accept that his intention is irrelevant and accept that Mr Houghton obviously knew about the claimant's work in question
[emphasis added].
The other similar works
i) The Houses of Parliament, Big Ben and so on are iconic images of London. So too is the Routemaster bus.
ii) The idea of putting such iconic images together is a common one. That includes in particular the idea of an image of Big Ben and the Houses of Parliament with a London bus on Westminster bridge (or the road nearby). The Getty Images picture (p10) is an example. Mr Fielder obviously did not suggest he was the first person to come up with such an idea.
iii) The technique of highlighting an iconic object like a bus against a black and white image is not unique to Mr Fielder (he did not suggest that it was). The Granta Books image (p16) shows an image which pre-dates Mr Fielder.
iv) Whether anyone had ever produced a black and white image of Big Ben and the Houses of Parliament with a red bus in it before Mr Fielder is not clear. The images at pages 2 to 7 predate the defendants' work but Mr Houghton could not otherwise date them. The Rodriguez image (p11) predates Mr Fielder's photograph but whether the background is truly black and white (as opposed to just a typical grey London street scene and sky) is not clear.
Originality
i) Its composition: not just Big Ben but a substantial frontage of the Houses of Parliament and the arches of Westminster Bridge. The bus is on the central left side near a lamppost. It is framed by building behind it. People can be seen on the bridge and some are in front of the bus, but they are not prominent. Portcullis House is visible as well as the river itself.
ii) The visual contrasts: one between the bright red bus and the monochrome background, and the other between the blank white sky and the rest of the photograph.
Infringement
i) Elements of the composition of the claimant's work which have not been taken are the prominent arches of the bridge and the river, the steps in the foreground and the prominent lamppost. The angle to the vertical is somewhat different since the road can be seen with the bus sitting on it in the defendants' image whereas from the angle of the claimant's picture a balustrade obscures the road. The angle presented by the facade of the Houses of Parliament is different: in the defendants' image the perspective of the facade falls away more sharply whereas in the claimant's image there is much less perspective. The bus is on the central right side of the image, touching Big Ben, it is not left of centre as in the claimant's picture. The defendants' bus is bigger and presents a slightly different angle to the viewer. There are no people in front of the defendants' bus.
ii) Although the images undoubtedly differ in their composition, elements of the overall composition of the claimant's image have been reproduced. The bus is a Routemaster, driving from right to left with Big Ben on the right of the bus. The riverside facade of the Houses of Parliament is part of the image. The bus is on Westminster Bridge (albeit in a different place) in both images. This is obvious in the claimant's image and can be seen from the presence of the balustrade on the left in the defendants' image. There are some people visible but they are small (and in different places). There is no other obvious traffic. The edge of Portcullis house is visible on the right. Running from top to bottom, there is a substantial amount of sky in the picture (albeit more in the claimant's) and the top of the bus is roughly the same height as the facade of the Houses of Parliament.
i) The element of bright red bus against a black and white background has been reproduced.
ii) The element of the blank white sky, which creates a strong sky line, has been reproduced. A small point arose that the image produced by Sphere actually has no sky at all, so that it takes on the background of the box it is placed on. Nothing turns on that since in use it is placed on a white (or very pale grey) tin.
Conclusion
Another matter
Postscript -a portrait version of the defendants' image
"It should be recalled that there is a 'portrait' version of the Alleged Infringement which appears on the smaller boxes of tea as well as on the side of the larger boxes. For the most part the case against this image will turn on the same issues, save that there are additional points on the cropping, which can best be illustrated overleaf."
" ... since nothing is likely to turn on the cropping, consideration of these others merely serves to confuse."
Temple Island v New English Teas 1CL 70031 Annexes
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