(Counsel in black robes preparing for Supreme Court oral argument - with apologies to the IPKat)
All eyes will be on the United States
Supreme Court (“SCOTUS”) on Monday, October 29, 2012 when it will hear oral argument in the immensely
important case of Kirtsaeng v.
John Wiley & Sons, Inc. This involves parallel importation of text books
into the United States that were legitimately manufactured abroad. The American
copyrit owner, however, wanted to block them because they were being resold
at lower prices than market would bear in the USA. If this fact situation sounds
rather familiar to Canadians, it should. That was basically the issue in Euro-Excellence v. Kraft which was decided by the Supreme Court of Canada in 2007.
That case involved chocolate bars and the frankly far-fetched argument that
copyright in a small logo on the wrapping should suffice to prevent the
parallel importation of these products. Our court split in interesting ways on
that case, in which I made the prevailing argument on behalf of the Retail
Council of Canada. Here’s a brief
analysis that I did for the Law Society of Upper Canada the following
year. Actually, tomorrow’s issue went to
SCOTUS once before in 2010 in the Costco v.
Omega case once before, but the Court split 4/4 on it.
The American lawyers are busy
sharpening the fine points of their submissions, which will, if things are
normal, will likely be instantly deflected and perhaps shredded by the usually
rather vigorous questions of the SCOTUS justices (other than one well known
exception, who may perhaps break his seven year long record of silence during
oral hearings, given his interest and evident insight into IP matters, which is
shown in the very important 2005 eBay v. MercExchange decision which held that
injunctions do not automatically flow from a finding of infringement in
patent cases).
The issue of the treatment of
parallel imports under copyright law is one that the late, great Sir Hugh
Laddie described as “one of the most difficult
topics in copyright law.” It must always be remembered that “parallel importation” refers to the importation of completely legitimate goods through
channels other than the one preferred by the local rights holder.
It
should be noted that Canada has a special sui
generis regime for books that allows for the blocking of parallel imports.
This flows from well over a century of angst about cultural protectionism for
Canadian publishers. While one can envisage such protectionism for cultural
products such as books, where local industries may be imperiled, it is
difficult to see why a similar doctrine should be used to control and prevent
free trade in consumer or commercial goods. That said, there is also an
argument that IP regimes that prevents international exhaustion and the
application of the “first sale doctrine” permits the sale of products such as
books and computer programs at lower prices in developing countries. The
American statutory provisions are very different than those of Canada, and do
not differentiate between books, chocolate bars or wrist watches.
This
is a debate that will not end any time soon, and perhaps should be dealt with
one day in a treaty – provided that there is any agreement at all on basic
issues. One thing, however, is clear. To suggest that there can be truly “free
trade” at the same time that copyright law can be used to prevent the parallel
importation of chocolate bars, wrist watches and even text books is at best naïve
and at worst, disingenuous and oxymoronic.
If
SCOTUS reverses the decision below – which ruled in favour of blocking
importation – there will likely be intense pressure on Congress to restore free
trade for the USA. One of the most cogent arguments before the court is that
any interpretation that blocks parallel importation of products made abroad is likely
to encourage even more export of jobs and manufacturing overseas. Arguably, much more is at stake tomorrow even than the right of international "exhaustion". Many are arguing that, if SCOTUS upholds the Court below, everything from garage sales to library lending to private sale of used Toyotas could be affected and prevented by excessively aggressive copyright owners.
Unlike
Canada’s Supreme Court, there will not be a live video feed of Monday’s hearing.
We will, however, see a transcript shortly after the hearing. A recording of
the oral argument will be available in a few days.
Note: This event has been cancelled due to Hurricane Sandy. Is this weather event an example of life imitating art with pathetic fallacy?
HPK
PS - Prof. Ariel Katz has an excellent blog about this case here.
PS -
PS - Prof. Ariel Katz has an excellent blog about this case here.
PS -
After a really fast read of the transcript, I think that the key moment may have
been:
JUSTICE KENNEDY: But you have to look at those hypotheticals in order
to decide this case.
MR. OLSON: Well, and that's --
JUSTICE KENNEDY: You're aware of the fact that if we write an opinion
with the -- with the rule that you propose, that we should, as a matter of
common sense, ask about the consequences of that rule. And that's what we are
asking.
Seems at least six judges are really concerned about "the horribles"
(i.e. re-selling used Toyotas and displaying Picassos, lending library books etc.) and/or exporting
jobs. EVen Ginsburg asked about exporting jobs.
There wasn't much discussion of any middle
ground.
Olson's best answer to the "horribles" was that they haven't
happened, that they are different cases and that there's always "fair use".
The latter point is frankly ridiculous in any situation that readily
comes to mind no matter how much one might love fair use. And as to the former
points, Supreme Courts exist to decide cases with broad implications as Olson
obviously knows. I'm astonished that he tried to confine the implication of this
case to these specific facts.
I detected some serious potential sympathy from at least Sotomayor,
Kagan, Breyer, Kennedy, Rogers and Alito in the rough chronological order that I
noted it.
One can never really read too much into Judges questions - but I'm
going out on a limb to predict reversal.
And by at least 6-3.
And I've read some comments from pretty smart people on listserves and blogs who seem to think that the SCOTUS may indeed reverse....
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