Is there a prima facie case of breach of copyright?
30 Carlisle Homes contends that the Tick Homes Plans were created by Mr Mallia referring to and copying the Carlisle Homes Plans without Carlisle Homes' authority. It argues that the evidence of copying is overwhelming, including that:
(a) each of the Tick Homes Plans appears to be a close copy of the corresponding Carlisle Homes Plan;
(b) each of the Tick Homes Plans appears to reproduce unique and distinctive features of the corresponding Carlisle Homes Plans;
(c) the design documents produced by the respondents in response to Carlisle Homes' request do not demonstrate the evolution of the designs and do not show that they were created without copying;
(d) Mr Mehl was previously employed by Carlisle Homes as General Manager of Carlisle Homes' "Easy Living" business from April 2015 until April 2017, and he had access to the Carlisle Homes Plans; and
(e) Tick Homes has closely emulated multiple aspects of Carlisle Homes' marketing materials in ways that demonstrate an awareness of and reference to them.
31 Mr Cordiner, Senior Counsel for Carlisle Homes, took the Court to numerous similarities between many of the Tick Homes Plans and the corresponding Carlisle Homes Plan. While the level of objective similarity varies between the different plans, I accept that many of the Tick Homes Plans show a high level of objective similarity to the corresponding Carlisle Homes Plan.
32 Mr Wallis, counsel for the respondents, reluctantly accepted that Carlisle Homes made out a prima facie case of breach of copyright, at least in relation to those plans with stronger similarity, but argues that Carlisle Homes' case is weak. The respondents argue, amongst other things, that:
(a) Mr Mehl and Mr Mallia's evidence denying that they had any reference to the Carlisle Homes Plans in designing the Tick Homes Plans should be accepted;
(b) Mr Mallia's explanation as to the absence of early sketches, early CAD drafts and emails which show the development of the draft plans without reference to the Carlisle Homes Plans should be accepted;
(c) there is little substance in the suggestion that Mr Mehl had access to the Carlisle Homes Plans as the former General Manager of Carlisle Homes' "Easy Living" business, and therefore the opportunity to copy them, when those plans were published on the Carlisle Homes' website for all and sundry to see;
(d) the similarities between the Tick Homes Plans and the Carlisle Homes Plans reflect house features which most consumers would wish to see (such as open plan kitchen/dining/living areas, an alfresco dining area, a main bedroom with ensuite bathroom and walk-in robe, subsidiary bedrooms and an additional family bathroom near those bedrooms) coupled with the restrictions on room and overall size associated with smaller than standard blocks of land;
(e) Mr Rogers' evidence that the Carlisle Homes Plans contain numerous features which are, on their own and/or in combination, unique and important distinctive features has no basis in the evidence or is, at least, overstated; and
(f) Carlisle Homes Plans is a volume builder and its "Easy Living" housing range is relatively low cost project housing. Carlisle Homes' marketing material shows that it did not market the Carlisle Homes Plans on the basis that its homes had unique or distinctive features, instead it largely did so on the basis that its homes are good value for money, quality constructions and will be speedily completed. The respondents submit that the notion that the type of project housing which the Carlisle Homes Plans embody is somehow unique or contains unique features does not withstand examination.
33 There is no dispute that Mr Mehl had access to the Carlisle Homes Plans and the opportunity to copy them. Rough versions of the plans are also available on Carlisle Homes' website. I infer that Mr Mehl had a close familiarity with the plans and knew that many customers liked them.
34 Mr Mallia denies that he was aware of the Carlisle Homes Plans at the time he drafted the Tick Homes Plans, but this does not exclude the possibility of indirect copying through the instructions Mr Mehl gave Mr Mallia in the drafting process. Further, while Mr Mehl denies that he made any reference to the Carlisle Homes Plans when he participated in the design process, this does not exclude the possibility that he unconsciously copied the Carlisle Homes Plans with which he was closely familiar.
35 It is concerning that some of the nine Tick Homes Plans, all purportedly created from scratch in a three-month period, are closely similar to the Carlisle Homes Plans, and troubling that the respondents did not produce early sketches, drafts and emails showing the evolution of the Tick Homes Plans, to establish that they were created without copying. However, in the absence of more detailed evidence and cross examination I am not prepared to discount Mr Mallia's explanation (through Mr Kheir) for the respondents' asserted failure/inability to produce earlier sketches or drafts, or his explanation for the design similarities. They are matters for trial.
Without rehearsing the detail of the similarities between the Tick Homes Plans and the corresponding Carlisle Homes Plan through which Senior Counsel for Carlisle Homes took the Court, I am persuaded that in relation to many of the Tick Homes Plans the level of objective similarity is high. There are also several Tick Homes Plans where the level of objective similarity is significantly lower, in relation to which Carlisle Homes says that they are reproductions of a substantial part of its plans.
36 But whether the Tick Homes Plans are reproductions is a more difficult question. As Wilcox and Lindgren JJ said in Tamawood Ltd v Henley Arch Pty Ltd (2004) 61 IPR 378; [2004] FCAFC 78 at [38]:
The application of the law of copyright to project home plans gives rise to special difficulty. All modern homes have certain features in common. In the case of project homes competing for the same number of dollars, there are pressures towards sameness. Of course, the size, number of rooms and facilities will vary according to the price range. Commonly, however, those in the same price range will be found:
(a) to be designed to fit blocks of approximately similar shape and dimensions;
(b) to provide for vehicular access and accommodation; and
(c) to include features demanded by the market in question, such as, a certain number of bedrooms, a laundry, a kitchen, a family or rumpus room, an ensuite and a walk-in wardrobe (WIR) in association with the main bedroom, built-in wardrobes in the other bedrooms, at least one bathroom in proximity to the other bedrooms, and certain facilities in the kitchen such as a sink, bench, dishwasher, stove, hot plate and microwave oven.
37 Counsel for the respondents took the Court to numerous examples which tend to show that many of the features of the Carlisle Homes Plans which Mr Rogers described as "on their own and/or in combination, unique and important distinctive features" can be seen in prior house designs of Mr Mallia and in the designs of competing volume builders. I am not persuaded that the features to which Mr Rogers pointed are as unique or distinctive as he says. It is arguable that those features, alone or in combination, are common features or amenities demanded by the market, functional requirements which are logically necessary to the efficient operation of the houses, or are dictated by the block size which points away from an inference of copying.
38 In the finish while I am well satisfied that Carlisle Homes established an arguable case of breach of copyright in relation to all the Carlisle Homes Plans, at this stage of the proceeding I am not persuaded to conclude that the prima facie case is either strong or weak as the parties respectively contend.