The video of the oral arguments in the recent Supreme Court of Canada hearing in CBC v. SODRAC is now finally available here.
My submission re the "mandatory tariff" theory on behalf of the McGill Centre for Intellectual Property Policy and Ariel Katz starts at at ~ the 152.00 mark.
Here are the factums.
I'm not sure why this was not webcast live on March 16, 2015 when it was heard. Apparently, some underlying material was designated as "confidential" by the Copyright Board, which happens all too frequently in Board cases - notwithstanding the fundamental principle of open courts in Canada. In any event, we now have the video.
HPK
Intellectual property law is good. Excess in intellectual property law is not. This blog is about excess in IP and related law. I have practiced law with prestigious firms and successfully acted for interveners in several important Supreme Court cases. I've also been in government & academe. My views are purely personal. Nothing on this blog should be taken as legal advice. I am a policy provocateur and currently not practising law. My email address is hknopf@gmail.com.
Tuesday, March 31, 2015
Monday, March 30, 2015
Some Comparative Observations & Stats on the Copyright Board, Selected Canadian Tribunals & the Supreme Court of Canada
Some lobbyists
and interested members of the copyright bar have been actively endorsing the
Copyright Board’s longstanding campaign for more resources to supposedly solve
the extraordinary delay problems at the Board. Here’s another very recent
effusive example.
There is a persistent but unexplained expectation that more resources will somehow
speed up the frequently four year delay before a hearing even takes place and
the now seemingly new normal delay of two years or more after the hearing for a
decision to be rendered. Assuming that
members of the Copyright Board have expertise in their subject matter, and that
they are actively engaged in writing their decisions, it is hard to see how
more resources alone will have any positive effect in solving the delay problem.
Federal Court judges routinely issue numerous – even dozens – of substantive
and significant decisions every year in six months or usually much less time after
hearing with no more “resources” other than one clerk just barely out of law school. Many
of these cases are far more complex both factually and legally and sometimes in
terms of public law importance than most at the Copyright Board. Even the less complex
ones – for example routine immigration cases – are very important to the
parties involved and require great care and judicial consideration.
The Canadian Judicial Council has recently stated that
it should never take more than six months for a judge to render a decision,
except in the most complex of cases. Indeed, the CJC said that “judges should
render decisions within six months of hearing a case, except in very complex
matters or where there are special circumstances.”
It is difficult to find any examples of cases at the Board that would warrant
an exception to this benchmark.
Ironically, even after these uniquely lengthy
delays, the Board’s decisions in turn are regularly challenged in the Courts
and sometimes dramatically reversed. Moreover, in two recent instances and
after long delays, the Board has even felt compelled itself to issue quick “mea
culpa” corrections, which have in in turn led to even more complications.
In this light, consider the following:
- There is an old adage attributed to Benjamin Franklin that “if you want something done, ask a busy person”.
- Canada’s Copyright Board is already by far the largest specialized copyright tribunal of its kind anywhere in the world.
- The Copyright Board process involves extensive use of an onerous interrogatory process that yields relatively little useful evidence at a hearing, but consumes enormous amounts of time (and money for lawyers) and has on several occasions driven away well-intentioned objectors.
- The interrogatory problem is exacerbated because the Copyright Board process never requires the tariff applicant to put forward the facts and legal arguments on which it intends to rely at the outset – which is contrary to virtually any other tribunal or court process that I have ever heard of. The result is that some tariff applicants simply go fishing in the interrogatory process – often in a drift net fashion – and thereby sometimes simply drive their opponents away. Whether this result is intentional and strategic doesn’t really matter. It happens because the Board lets it happen and some objectors’ counsel have arguably not taken all available steps to curtail this excess.
- The Copyright Board hears again and again from the same perennial “experts” who sometimes have little if any independence from those who ultimately pay their bills and whose “evidence” would almost certainly never be allowed in a normal court, especially in view of recent jurisprudence in the IP context from the Supreme Court of Canada.
- Even if these “experts” were sufficiently “independent”, it is highly questionable in many cases whether their testimony is even really “necessary”. The Supreme Court has made it clear that if the “expert” evidence is not “necessary”, it should not be admitted. The Board members themselves are assumed to have some expertise in copyright and economic regulation and the Supreme Court has said quite clearly that experts are both unnecessary and undesirable when the “common sense” of the decision maker should suffice.
- There are seldom any complex legal issues involved in Copyright Board hearings, and when they do arise, the Board is often reversed by the Federal Court of Appeal (at least once in a “brusque” manner according to retired Chairman Vancise – and yes, I was involved) and lately and clearly by the Supreme Court of Canada in the “pentalogy”.
- Every specialized tribunal suffers from the inherent risk of “regulatory capture”. It is well known that can be an unseemly amount of lobbying when it comes to Copyright Board appointments. See Simon Doyle’s recent tightly pay walled but important piece in the Globe and Mail. Adding more resources can only exacerbate any possible potential problems in this respect.
- There is much to be said for considering the American model of “consent decrees” overseen by truly independent and expert federal judges. Indeed, Canada has a Competition Tribunal with a lean and efficient support infrastructure and several Federal Court judges with expertise and experience in economic regulation and even intellectual property issues in place at any given time. Since the Copyright Board was born out of concern about “super monopolies” expressed by the late great Judge Parker in 1935, the possible adaptation of a “consent decree” model in Canada under the aegis of the Competition Tribunal is something that merits serious exploration. In theory, the entire role of the Board could be modified and absorbed by the Competition Tribunal, although this would almost certainly require legislative change. Such a transformation might also save taxpayers a lot of money.
- The Patented Medicines Notice of Compliance proceedings in the Federal Court are over and done with including a judgment within 24 months because regulations say that they must be. These cases are usually very complicated factually, and often involve several experts in pharmaceutical chemistry, etc. – an area far removed from the “common sense” comfort zone of most judges. However, these hearings run well because they must – and normally take no more than 4 or 5 days.
The inclusion of the Supreme Court of Canada is a result of the published statement of the retired Chairman of the Copyright Board (William Vancise) in 2006 shortly after his appointment:
I am not at all happy with the time it takes to render a final decision. I have tried to address the issue and I can assure you it will be resolved. If the Supreme Court of Canada can render a decision within six months of a hearing, there is no reason why this Board cannot do the same. My goal is to see that this occurs. (emphasis added)
It was indeed a rather odd notion on the part of
Judge Vancise to use the Supreme Court of Canada as a proxy for the Board’s
timing benchmarks, because the Supreme Court does not hear evidence or
witnesses and it does, by definition, almost always deal with very complex and
important legal issues. However, QED. If the Court can render judgments in six
months, a fortiori one would think
that the Board could do so – if not in much less time. Therefore, it is unfortunate
that Justice Vancise was not able to resolve this problem during his ten year
tenure and it would seem anecdotally that the delay problem has actually become
significantly worse in recent years. For example, it has been nearly 2.5 years
since the Board’s hearing in the Access Copyright - Provincial and Territorial
Governments Tariffs (2005-2009 and 2010-2014)
matter and no decision has yet been rendered in that matter. The Access
Copyright Post-Secondary Tariff seems to have gone into a state of suspended
animation, since there has been no follow up by the Board to its announcement
on January 17, 2014 that it will postpone the hearing sine die and will “will
either decide when to reschedule the hearing or proceed on paper”.
So, in the meantime, here’s some data I’ve assembled without being commissioned by anyone:
Tribunal/ Applicable
Regulations or Rules re Procedure
|
Mandate/# of Significant & Substantive
Decisions per year
|
# of Members
|
# of Staff FTE
|
Budget (i.e. net cost of operations)
|
Copyright Board/No procedural regulations in
place other than Board’s informal and very general “Directive
on Procedure”
|
Setting Copyright Tariffs and Levies
pursuant to Copyright Act/ app. 3 per year. (S.
77 “Unlocatable” decisions cannot be considered as “significant” and have
never involved an actual hearing)
|
Up to 5 full time. Currently 1 full time +
1 part time. Chair (currently vacant)who must be a sitting or retired judge.
|
(2013-2014)
|
|
Up to six judicial members from Federal
Court and not more than eight lay members
|
(2014-2015)
|
|||
Wide range of licensing and regulatory
oversight in broadcasting and telecommunication, internet, ant-spam, etc./
app. 600-700 decisions a year – many minor but many very important, e.g. 2014
|
Chair, two Vice-Chairs and up to 10
national and Regional Commissioners
|
(2013-2014)
(Expenses of
65,030 offset by revenues of 47,444)
|
||
“international
trade cases, procurement cases, customs and excise tax appeals and
government-mandated inquiries within the Tribunal’s jurisdiction”/129 decisions in 2013-2014
|
Up to seven full time members including a
chairperson
|
|||
Canadian Industrial Relations Tribunal/Canada Industrial Relations
Board Regulations, 2012 (SOR/2001-520)
|
Handles more than 600 labour related
matters under Federal jurisdiction, including Status of the Artist Act. Processing times are published
here.
|
Chair, two Vice-Chairs, up to six full time
members, and additional part time members
|
|
|
Rules on oppositions to registration and s.
45 expungement. Many of these rulings involve hearings./ 741 decisions rendered in
2011-2-12
|
These are all public service positions.
|
12
|
N/A
|
|
Nine full time justices.
|
(net cost of operations est. for 2013-2014)
|
The problems of the Board can only be solved if both
of two things happen:
- In the short term and very urgently, we need the appointment of a Chairperson (who must be a sitting or retired judge) who can hit the ground running in terms of knowledge of copyright and administrative law at minimum and is able and prepared from a managerial standpoint to make some changes in the way things work at the Board. This person should preferably also have experience in competition, communications and/or other related areas of economic regulatory law. It will be relatively easy to find such a qualified person from the ranks of sitting or retired Federal Court or Federal Court of Appeal judges and probably very difficult to find the right person elsewhere. Needless to say, given the very specialized mandate of the Board, such person’s career prior to appointment to the bench should not give rise to any possible apprehension of bias.
- In the medium but not far off term (i.e. a year or two but no more), we need regulations to deal with such issues as steps in a proceeding, the interrogatory or discovery processes, benchmark timelines, “expert evidence”, etc. The Board is clearly unable or unwilling to make anything more than very incremental changes from now well-established but clearly problematic processes. Its latest effort at consultation has produced a remarkable consensus amongst a mix of normally strange bedfellows who agree that the recommendations by the majority of the Working Committee may only make things even worse, which is no easy task in this instance. See the very limited terms of reference at page 27 of the recent Working Committee Report.
It will be noticed in the above chart that the
Board is the only institution listed without regulations or other form of
mandated specific rules to govern its procedure. There is no reason for this to be the case –
indeed experience suggests quite the contrary. As everyone knows, regulations
are much easier to implement than statutes. That sometimes pesky and petulant
creature known as Parliament is not involved. All the necessary authority is
already in place in this case. There’s no need – and arguably no excuse - to
wait for the five year review.
HPK
Friday, March 13, 2015
Update on Canadian Copyright Board Matters: What is Happening and Not Happening
There’s
a lot going on – or not going on – concerning the Copyright Board.
The
Board has promptly posted all the
responses to its Working Group Committee Report. I won’t begin to analyze them,
other than to say that there was a surprising amount of agreement amongst a
number of normally strange bedfellows (including Music Canada, Access
Copyright, major broadcasters and yours truly) that the recommendations might
actually make proceedings even longer and more expensive at the Board.
Simon
Doyle has written a timely piece in the Globe and Mail – unfortunately it’s heavily pay-walled – about the
slowness of the Government to appoint a new Board chairperson. He mentions some
– though not all – of the names that are being talked about in various circles.
He describes some of the apparently intense lobbying that is taking place. He also
quotes me as follows:
“There’s
no apparent reason why it now often takes the board four years to get to a
hearing and two years or more to render a decision,” Howard Knopf, a copyright
lawyer in Ottawa with Macera & Jarzyna LLP, said by email.
Mr.
Knopf said the Copyright Board has oversight of about $500-million a year “of
collective copyright activity in Canada. Also, the board’s processes have
generated a lot of money over the years for certain lawyers, consultants and
perennial ‘expert’ witnesses.”
Mr.
Knopf said the government can implement regulations that could address the
steps, stages and timelines of a hearing, the interrogatory process, the
qualification of experts, and timelines for the rendering of a decision after a
hearing.
Meanwhile,
back in the Courts, on Monday morning, March 16, 2015 the Supreme Court of
Canada will hear the CBC v SODRAC appeal, which involves yet another judicial review of a Copyright
Board decision. This will be the 17th case involving important consideration of the
Copyright Act that this Court will
have heard beginning with the 2002 case of Théberge v Galerie d’Art du Petit Champlain inc. Seven of these have
arisen from judicial review of Copyright Board decisions. Five others were
infringement cases. Prior to 2002, the last important copyright case from the Court
was Bishop v. Stevens,
[1990] 2 S.C.R. 467, which will be referred to very often on Monday.
CBC v SODRAC will focus mainly on technological
neutrality. I should disclose my involvement as counsel for the Centre for
Intellectual Property Policy at McGill and Prof. Ariel Katz. They have been given
leave to intervene on what they call the “mandatory tariff” theory. Their position
is that it:
…lacks any basis in law:
standard principles of statutory interpretation contradict it; the case law
debunks it; and the legislative history discredits it. In addition to absurd
results that contradict fundamental tenets of the rule of law, the “mandatory
tariff” theory threatens to upset the balance in Canadian copyright law. It
would overly compensate owners, contrary to this Court’s holding in Théberge, and
it could gut fair dealing and others users’ rights, contrary to what this Court
cautioned against in CCH.
The
webcast will be delayed because SODRAC has filed some material that it regards
as confidential. The music industry will present two joint interventions, and
CIPPIC will also appear. All the factums can be found here.
Those
who want to watch this live in real time will have to attend at the Court.
Proceedings start at 9:30 AM.
HPK
Friday, March 06, 2015
My Response to Canadian Copyright Board Working Group Report of February 4, 2015
Here is my response to the Copyright Board's Working Group report, which I posted about on February 10, 2015. Michael Geist also wrote about it here.
HPK