In , the Patents County Court (âPCCâ) in London held that a firm called âArt of the Loomâ and its partners (âdefendantsâ) had infringed Abraham Moonâs (âclaimantâ) copyright in âSkye Sageâ. This decision is noteworthy because it serves as an example of how copyright law relates to the production of fabric designs.
Abraham Moon is a fully integrated woolen mill based in 91ŃÇÉ«shire, famous for its high-end fabrics and clientele. Abraham Moon designed a fabric called âSkye Sageâ in 2004 as part of the companyâs new direction in selling furnishing fabrics. âSkye Sageâ went to market in 2005 and quickly became a success. In 2010 Abraham Moon noticed Art of the Loomâs âSpring Meadowâ fabric, which he claimed to be a copy of his own âSkye Sageâ. It is important to note that Art of the Loom was selling its fabric to some of the claimantâs customers.
Abraham Moon brought an action for copyright infringement. The defendants denied infringement by arguing that the âSpring Meadowâ fabric was designed independently of âSkye Sageâ. Additionally, they contended that there was no existing copyright in âSkye Sageâ; therefore âSpring Meadowâ could not have infringed it in any case.
The stipulates that copyright subsists in original or artistic works. The Act defines âartistic workâ as a âgraphic work, photograph, sculpture or collage irrespective of artistic qualityâ. Further, and of the Act require that copyright is infringed by reproducing the whole or a substantial part of a work in a material form, where the copying is without a licence, where the public is issued with copies of the work or where the literary work is adapted.
In this decision, the PCC found that the âSpring Meadowâ ticket was an infringing copy of the âSkye Sageâ one. Judge Birss found that the âSkye Ticket Stampâ was an original literary work within the scope of of the 1988 Act and that a substantial part of it was reproduced and adapted in the âSpring Meadow Ticketâ. However, the PCC ruled that âalthough the Spring Meadow ticket was an infringing copy of the Sky Sage Ticket Stampâ, the âSpring Meadowâ fabric itself was not. In addition, Judge Birss found that the âSkye Ticket Stampâ was an artistic work within the meaning of of the 1988 Act, best described as a âgraphic workâ. According to the PCC, âSpring Meadow infringes the artistic copyright because it reproduces the appearance of Skye Sageâ on the basis that âthe ticket is not simply a set of instructions which can be performed on a loom, it is also a record of an image and the image has been reproducedâ. Judge Birss concluded on this issue that artistic copyright âshould be a âcontentâ copyright and not a âsignalâ copyrightâ. Finally, the PCC found that all the defendants orchestrated the copying of Skye Sage and therefore, ruled that all of them are liable for infringement of copyright.
In Canada, of the Copyright Act stipulates that no âmethod or principle of manufacture or constructionâ is protectable. This follows in which the Supreme Court found that the coloured rods manufactured by South West Imports Ltd using Cuisenaireâs book, âwere not things in which copyright [could] be hadâ. More specifically, the Court reaffirmed the principle that âthere is a clear distinction between the book which describes it, and the art or mechanical device which is describedâ. In rejecting that finished articles are reproductions of the literary work, the Court adopted the analogy cited in the Australian decision : âeverybody who made a rabbit pie in accordance with the recipe in Mrs. Beeton's Cookery Book would infringe the literary copyright in that book.â Therefore, given the Courtâs syllogism in Cuisenaire, it would be hard to imagine that a fabric design could be protected on the basis that a ticket stamp has a visual significance because skilled designers can visualize the instructions, although laymen cannot. It is my opinion that in a factually similar case the Canadian Supreme Court would reaffirm its previous decision and the principle that ideas, procedures or methods are not protectable under copyright law.
It is only a matter of time to see whether the clash of the tartans will be continued on appealâŠ
Georgios Andriotis is a second year law student at Université de Montréal.
