4.4 Judicial consideration of similar language
78 Several cases have referred to provisions in similar terms to s 183(1) of the Copyright Act. Whilst neither party suggests that these cases are binding upon this Court, with one exception, being the minority view in Pfizer, none in their reasoning provide support for the limitations proposed by the applicant.
79 In General Steel Industries Inc v Commissioner for Railways (NSW) [1964] HCA 69; (1964) 112 CLR 125, Barwick CJ considered the application of s 125 of the Patents Act 1952 - 1960 (Cth). The plaintiff asserted infringement of a patent entitled "Railway Vehicle Body and Truck Central Bearing" by the Commissioner for Railways. The defendant contended that the proceedings were an abuse of process because of the operation of s 125 which relevantly provided that at any time after an application for a patent has been lodged or a patent has been granted "the Commonwealth or a State, or a person authorized in writing by the Commonwealth or a State, may make, use, exercise or vend the invention for the services of the Commonwealth or State…".
80 Barwick CJ said at 133-134:
The evident purpose of s 125, having regard to sub-s (7), is to ensure that the Governments of the Commonwealth and of the States have the invention available to them for the benefit of the services of the respective Governments at once, rather than at the end of the term of the letters patent. Under s 132 the Patents Act recognises that in Australia those services are managed or performed, not exclusively by departments of government, but as well by "authorities" of the Commonwealth or State….Subs-section (8) of s 125, in providing that no action for infringement shall be brought for what would otherwise be an infringement of the letters patent, emphasizes the clear intention of sub-s (1) and with sub-s (7) provides a means of securing the untrammelled use of the invention by the Governments and the authorities of the Commonwealth and the States. On the other hand, sub-ss (5) and (6) ensure that proper compensation shall be paid to the owner of the letters patent for the acts of a Government or an authority of Commonwealth or State which makes use of the invention.
(Emphasis added)
81 The Court continued:
The railway system of the State is, in my opinion, undoubtedly a service of the State and the use of the invention in the construction of railway carriages to be used by the Commissioner in that railway system is a use for a service of the State or for the services of the state within the meaning of …s 125(1). One could scarcely imagine that sections such as ss 125 and 132, with their evidence practical purpose did not extend to include within the expression the use of the services of the Commonwealth or State, the use of an invention for the purposes of one of the Government railway systems in Australia.
82 It may be seen that the Court considered that s 125 was to have a broad and facilitative effect, ensuring that the Crown would have "untrammelled" use of the invention where it is for the benefit of the services of the Crown. That benefit included the Commissioner for Railways authorising third parties (who were also defendants) to use the patented invention. Such authorisation necessarily would extend to use of the invention in designing and building prototypes to ultimately supply railway carriages that contained the invention. It is difficult to conceive that such use would not include building of failed prototypes that never made it into final stages, even if such prototypes fell within the scope of the claimed invention.
83 In CAL v NSW the plurality referred to the decision of the House of Lords in Pfizer noting that the words "for the services of the Crown" as applied in that case as being a formula "of some antiquity".
84 In Pfizer, the House of Lords addressed s 46(1) of the Patents Act 1946 (UK) which provided that:
Notwithstanding anything in this Act, any Government department, and any person authorised in writing by a Government department, may make, use and exercise any patented invention for the services of the Crown in accordance with the …provisions of this section.
(Emphasis added)
85 The case concerned the provision of the antibiotic, tetracycline, which was used in the treatment of patents in the National Health Service (NHS). The respondent Ministry had invited tenders for the supply of the drug from private firms and awarded the tender to a pharmaceutical company which obtained supplies of the antibiotic from Italy. The respondent authorised the company to make, use and exercise the invention under the provisions of s 46 of the Patents Act 1946 (UK) to fulfil the contract. The appellants sought declarations that the respondent had no power under s 46(1) to do so. An issue was whether the making or supply of the drug by a third party for use in the treatment of patents amounted to use of the drug "for the services of the Crown". The appellants argued that it was not, because the drug was being used for the benefit of patients and not for the benefit of any service of the Crown. The respondents argued that the drug was to be used in hospitals for the services of the Crown because it was used by servants of the Crown in performance of their duties, and it was irrelevant to consider who benefits by or from such use.
86 Lord Reid noted (at 533) that "the services of the Crown" in the parlance of the day extended to the armed services, the Civil Service, the foreign colonial and consular services, the Post Office and perhaps other. Lord Reid indicated that there are now considerably more government activities which are staffed and operated by servants of the Crown and are subject to the direction of the appropriate Minister. However, it was not in contest that the hospital service fell within the phrase "services of the Crown". The real controversy concerned what was meant by "for the services of the Crown". Lord Reid rejected the notion that there is a relevant dichotomy between the provision of a patented article for the benefit of the department or service which uses them and the provision of such an article for the benefit of someone outside the department or service who may derive benefit from the use. He observed (at 534) that most, if not all activities of government departments or services are intended to be for the benefit of the public, and few can be regarded as solely, or even mainly, for the benefit of the department or members of the Crown entity. He went on at 535:
It appears to me that the natural meaning of use for the services of the Crown is use by members of such services in the course of their duties. Sometimes, as in the case of the armed services, that use will or is intended to benefit the whole community: sometimes such use will benefit a particular section of the community: and sometimes it will benefit particular individuals. I cannot see any good reason for making a distinction between one such case and another. It is true that the proliferation of Government services may have impaired the protection given to inventors by patents, by increasing the number of cases in which patents can be used by the Government without the consent of the patentee. But if that has created any legitimate grievance it is for Parliament to provide the remedy.
(Emphasis added)
87 Lord Evershed had a similar view. He considered (at 543) that there is not a true antithesis between services of the Crown in the sense of services related to the functions of government as such and services of the Crown in the sense of the provision of facilities for general public benefit. The Ministry of Health was, by statute, founded for the promotion of the health of the people of England and Wales and a patented process is used "for" the services of the Crown if it is used by a department of government "for the fulfilment of the duties laid upon the Government by the legislation creating and regulating the Ministry of Health".
88 In adopting a similar position, Lord Upjohn addressed (at 551) a 'floodgates' argument advanced by the appellants, which was that if the phrase "services of the Crown" was not limited to meaning any government department or other person duly authorised under s 46(1) to use or exercise any invention for the benefit of departments of the Crown, then the Government would be authorised to take any invention for the purpose of any function of a department of the Crown, which would impose no limit on the Crown's authority under s 46. He found that if one can discern in the National Health Service Act something which can properly be described as one of the "services of the Crown", then the relevant Government department must have power to exercise the authority in s 46, notwithstanding that the prime beneficiaries are members of the public and not doctors or nurses, saying at 552:
…Such user is authorised because this particular service of the Crown provides… for their better health. Necessarily it can only be carried out by improving the health of the individuals attending the National Health hospitals.
89 In the context of the statutory usage in Pfizer, Lord Reid considered that services of the Crown extended to government activities staffed and operated by servants of the Crown and subject to the direction of the appropriate Minister. Lord Reid expressed the view (at 535) that the natural meaning of "use for the services of the Crown" is use by members of the public service in the course of their duties, and that sometimes such use will or is intended to benefit the community as a whole, portions of a community or particular individuals. Lord Evershed (at 543) and Lord Upjohn (at 552) expressed similarly expansive views as to how s 46 should be understood.
90 It might be seen that the majority view of the expression was that it was broad. However, the applicant is correct to point out that on its facts the decision is quite narrow. The decision being that the supply of a pharmaceutical product to the NHS for administration to patients is a use "for the services of the Crown".
91 The minority view held by Lord Pearce and Lord Wilberforce was that the approach of the majority was too wide and would make too great an incision into the monopoly right granted to the patentee. They considered that the phrase is to be understood to mean that the use must be by the Crown or its servants and that it must be for the benefit of the Crown or its servants. This view was made clear having regard to the nature of patent rights, which confer a monopoly on the selling of the patented article, and that the limited right reserved by the Crown is to enable it to make use of the article for its own benefit and not to enter into the field of supplying the article to the public, in competition with the patentee.,
92 In CAL v NSW the issue was whether the State of New South Wales had a licence to reproduce certain survey plans and to communicate them to the public, independently of the scheme prescribed in s 183 of the Copyright Act. The appellant contended that s 183 provides for a statutory licence, which leaves no room for the implication of a licence to copy the plans or communicate them to the public, there being no necessity for an implied license when there was an express statutory license available. It sought remuneration on equitable terms as a relevant collecting society pursuant to the scheme in ss 183A - 183F of the Copyright Act. The State contended that in the circumstances in which the survey plans were prepared, an implied licence arose independent from the operation of s 183 and that this should be permitted to govern the arrangements for the reproduction of the copyright works in question. The High Court found in favour of the appellant.
93 The High Court noted that s 183(1) followed the form of provisions under Pt XIV of the Patents Act 1952 (Cth) (now Ch 17, Pt 2 of the Patents Act 1990 (Cth)), thereby adopting the recommendations of the Spicer Committee Report. It observed at [56]-[57]:
The meaning of the formula "for the services of the Crown", as it occurred in s 46(1) of the Patents Act 1949 (UK), was considered in Pfizer Corporation v Ministry of Health. A majority in the House of Lords held that the formula, of some antiquity, was not limited to the internal activities of government departments but included use by government departments in the fulfilment of duties imposed on them by legislation, and that the expression was broad enough to cover provision of products to the public.
In any event, with an echo of s 51(xxxi) of the Constitution, the Spicer Committee made its recommendation for government use of copyright material in the following terms:
"The Solicitor‑General of the Commonwealth has expressed the view that the Commonwealth and the States should be empowered to use copyright material for any purposes of the Crown, subject to the payment of just terms to be fixed, in the absence of agreement, by the Court. A majority of us agree with that view. The occasions on which the Crown may need to use copyright material are varied and many. Most of us think that it is not possible to list those matters which might be said to be more vital to the public interest than others. At the same time, the rights of the author should be protected by provisions for the payment of just compensation to be fixed in the last resort by the Court."
(citations omitted, emphasis in original)
94 The High Court considered (at [61]) that s 183(1) made no distinctions between government uses obliged by statute or government uses which may be "vital to the public interest" on the one hand (a course proposed in the Gregory Committee Report) and government uses which reflect considerations resembling commercial uses, on the other.
95 In ABC full court (Bowen CJ, Franki, Sheppard JJ), the question concerned a formulation by the Australasian Performing Right Association (APRA) of a licensing scheme granting a licence to the Australian Broadcasting Commission (ABC) to broadcast certain works owned and controlled by it. Pursuant to s 154(1) of the Copyright Act, APRA referred the scheme to the Copyright Tribunal, where the ABC objected to its jurisdiction on the ground that it was an agent or instrumentality of the Commonwealth and as such was afforded the benefit of s 183 of the Copyright Act. The Court found that the ABC did not fall within the section because it was neither the Commonwealth nor an agent or instrumentality of it (Bowen CJ, Franki J at 159; Sheppard J at 172). Bowen CJ and Franki J nonetheless went on to consider whether television broadcasts or sound broadcasts were acts done "for the services of the Commonwealth" within s 183(1) on the assumption that the ABC was such an agency. Their Honours said at 160:
If the Commission is the Crown, then it could be said its broadcasting was "for the services of the Crown" if the view of the majority…in Pfizer...be accepted for Australian conditions. This was that the phrase "for the services of the Crown" is not restricted to the traditional notion that it relates to services used by the Crown or its servants but in modern times extends also to services provided by the Crown or its servants to members of the public. In view of our conclusion that the Commission is not the Crown it is unnecessary to express a concluded view on this point.
(Emphasis added)
96 In further obiter dicta remarks, their Honours considered the contention put forward by the ABC, in the course of its argument, that each individual act of the ABC did not have to be examined under s 183 to determine whether a particular act, for example, the broadcasting of a sound recording, constituted an act done for the services of the Commonwealth. Although their Honours did not come to a conclusion on the question, their Honours expressed the view that in many instances, even in a very short period, a television or sound broadcast may involve many acts which, in the absence of some authorization, would infringe a great many copyrights. And that as a result, it seemed unlikely that Parliament intended to place such broad obligations on the Commonwealth.
97 In Stack v Brisbane City Council [1995] FCA 570; (1995) 59 FCR 71 (Cooper J), one issue was whether the respondent City Council could rely on s 163(1) of the Patents Act 1990 (Cth) (which was the corresponding provision to s 125 of the Patents Act 1952 (Cth)) in answer to a claim that it had infringed a patent for "water meter assemblies" by using certain water meters as part of the supply by it of reticulated water in its local authority area. Section 162 of the Patents Act 1990 (Cth) provided (similarly to s 132 of the Patents Act 1952 (Cth)) that a reference in the current Chapter to "a State includes a reference to an authority of a State". After concluding that the respondent was an authority of a State for the purposes of s 163(1), Cooper J considered whether or not the exploitation of the invention claimed was "for the services of the State". His Honour referred to each of General Steel, Pfizer and ABC Full Court and two older first instance decisions in the United Kingdom: Pyrene Co Ltd v Webb Lamp Co Ltd (1920) 37 RPC 57 and Aktiengesellschaft fur Autogene Aluminium Schweissung v London Aluminium Co Ltd (No 2) (1923) 40 RPC 107. He concluded (at 88) that in each of these older cases and also in General Steel there was the supply of an item by a contractor "for the direct use" of the authority or department concerned and in none was there a re-supply of the item to a third party in competition with the patentee. On that basis, he concluded that whether or not one adopted the majority or minority view expressed in Pfizer, the facts of each of the three cases fell within the ambit of that decision. It was therefore unnecessary for him to consider whether the majority view in Pfizer is the law in Australia. Turning to the facts of the case before him, his Honour concluded that as the water meters were supplied to the respondent City Council to be attached to its pipework to measure the quantity of water supplied by it to the landowners, the supply of the meters is not to the land owners but remains an asset of the respondent City Council. As such it was not only a direct use within all of the reasoning in Pfizer but also, conformably within the approach in General Steel, the use of the water meters was as an authority of the State for the services of the State. As his Honour held at 88:
Conformably with the approach taken by Barwick CJ in General Steel Industries the use of the water meters by the BCC as part of the supply by it of reticulated water in the Brisbane local authority area is the exploitation by the BCC as an authority of a State of the invention…for the services of it as such an authority. In consequence, s 163(1) of the Act operates to prevent the exploitation…constituting an infringement…
98 It may be seen that none of the cases surveyed above addresses the factual position in the present case, where the services rendered by the respondent are for the internal workings of the representative government clients. However, it is apparent from those few cases that address the construction of s 183(1) or similar language used in various Patents Acts, that the phrase "for the services" of the Commonwealth, State or Crown has been considered to have a broad and facilitative operation.
99 The majority in Pfizer considered (at 535, 543) the natural meaning of the phrase to be use by members of the public service in the course of their duties. Barwick CJ in General Steel, who did not refer to Pfizer, separately considered (at 133-134) that the language used reflected a Parliamentary intention to secure the "untrammelled" use of an invention by governments for the benefit of the services that they provide. The High Court in CAL v NSW added little on the point, but noted (at [57]), in apparent recognition of their relevance to the question of construction, the observations made by the Spicer Committee Report that the occasions on which the Crown may need to use copyright are "varied and many". Nothing in ABC full court or Stack recommends a different approach.
100 Whilst some of the other examples referred to by the applicant - including Pocketful of Tunes and CAL v NSW - provided examples of a "direct connection" between the act comprised in the copyright and the services rendered to the citizenry, which is propounded by the applicant as the necessary test, not all did. For instance, re Application by Seven Dimensions Pty Ltd [1996] ACopyT 1; (1996) 35 IPR 1 (Sheppard P) involved the editing by the NSW Police Service of a training video (prepared by the applicant) which was then shown to its employees. However, in none of the examples was the Court obliged to consider the question of construction posed in this case and with that understanding in mind, those cases are not of particular assistance.
101 In my view, the text of s 183(1), the legislative context in which it appears, the apparent legislative policy that underpins it and the cases that consider the construction of the section indicate that an otherwise infringing act will be "for the services of the Commonwealth or State" where it is done for the benefit of the Commonwealth or State, whether or not there is a direct connection between the act and services provided to citizens.
102 Section 183(1) is an affirmative defence, and it will be for a respondent to a claim for infringement to satisfy the Court that the services are supplied for that purpose.
103 By the scheme of Part VII of the Copyright Act, the obligations to obtain proper authorisation and to report otherwise infringing acts and pay compensation for the use reflect the intention of Parliament to balance this broad intrusion into the rights of copyright owners with the protection of their commercial interests.
104 I now turn to consider this construction in the context of the facts of the case.